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The Old West Kirk and Its Significance To Greenock's Heritage
The Old West Kirk and Its Significance To Greenock's Heritage
An assessment by
Andrew Pearson
December, 2022
1
The Old West Kirk, situated at the T-junction of the Esplanade with
Campbell Street, in the elegant West End of Greenock
2
Background to the kirk and its founder within the Scotland of their epoch
To most Greenockians the ‘Old West Kirk’ is a weel kent landmark at the T-junction
corner of the Esplanade with Campbell Street. However, not everyone appreciates its
importance to local lore. Associated with religion of course, yet it was not Greenock’s
earliest Christian witness. Kilblain Street commemorates an 8th century chapel,
dedicated to St. Blane by the culdee (i.e. cèile Dè - ‘companion of God’) community of
the ancient Celtic Church. And St. Lawrence’s Bay is named after an also long
vanished chapel, this of the Roman Catholic faith - dedicated to a 3rd century Christian
martyr, St. Lawrence - its site now beneath a Rue End Street supermarket carpark. A
third chapel, of bygones vintage, was situated almost at the present Greenock boundary
with Port Glasgow on a now long disappeared farm aptly named Chapelton.
Nevertheless, the district’s oldest extant religious fabric is contained within the above-
noted church on the Esplanade, where a plaque on its (nowadays) southeast facing wall
proclaims its venerability as: ‘The Kirk of Grenok, Built by Johnne Schaw, AD 1591’.
Today his name would be ‘John Shaw’; his descendants’ forenames are ‘John’: but not
till the 18th century was the ‘c’ in ‘Schaw’ - merely a sibilant re-enforcement - dropped.
Greenock, thenabouts, was a feudal barony; i.e. an extent of land with jurisdiction over
it, granted by the king to a ‘laird’ (i.e. lord); this being Johnne Schaw’s status. Another
name for a laird, in this context, was ‘feudal baron’. So, Johnne could interchangeably
be referred to as ‘Laird of Greenock’ or ‘Baron of Greenock’. Anyway, it meant that
he had the unilateral power of administering the Law of Scotland - as judge and jury
effectively - over his tenants as well as being their landlord. A village, also called
Greenock, was located within the barony in the Rue End Street area of the present town.
{Technically, Johnne was laird only of Wester Greenock Barony. There was an Easter
Greenock Barony which will enter this narrative at a later stage. The Easter barony
was owned by the Craufurd’s of Kilbirnie as a subordinate estate to the latter family.
Nevertheless, the territorial designation of the Schaw family was habitually rendered
just as ‘of Greenock’.}
Johnne administered
his domain from his
castle. Later progeny
would extend it to
become a mansion. It
was located at today’s
northernmost extent of
Lyndoch Street where
a now derelict site is
(sadly) all that remains
of its former presence.
Of a much later date than Johnne’s is the painting: ‘Greenock’, 1811, by Francis James
Sarjent, . Approaching the town from the east, it shows the Greenock Castle/Mansion
(the baronial ‘caput’ or headquarters, from Latin = head/capital) towering alone on its
raised site above the other buildings in the town - or, in Johnne’s day, largish village.
3
Johnne Schaw’s kin provided hereditary wine-tasters (‘Masters of the Wine Cellar’) to
the Scottish kings, this being for protection of their being poisoned. The beverage,
once poured into a goblet and if not immediately drunk, was
‘capped’, by the wine-tester, to prevent tampering, indicating
the significance of the motif in the Schaw armorial shield
which adorns the Old West Kirk on a present northwest wall.
However, although Johnne’s grandfather James, father Alexander, and brother James,
followed the family tradition of wine-tasting in royal service, Johnne Schaw did not.
Despite him incorporating the ‘capped goblet’ motif within his own coat of arms shield
- this undoubtedly for its familial prestige value - he was too busy, certainly in his
mature years, pursuing quite a different profession, as will become apparent.
The 1560 the ‘Confession of Faith’, formulated by six leading Scottish theologians
advocating a radical religious reform in protest against the excesses of the then Roman
Catholic Church, sounded a clarion call for the Scottish Parliament, in August, to ratify,
in principle, inauguration of a Protestant-Reformation, national ‘Church of Scotland’.
George Williamson, in his book, ‘Old Greenock’ (1888), on page 15, states: “Born
about 20 years before the Reformation… John Schaw devoted himself to ecclesiastical
business for a series of years. We first hear of him as one of the ‘Barroness of the
Kirk’ at the Assembly of 1567, his name appearing as one of the parties to the articles
then subscribed. And next in 1571… the name of ‘John Schaw of Grinock’ is found
among the ‘superintendents, commissioners to plant kirks…”, etc., throughout the land.
The ‘Assembly’ was the new church’s highest ‘Court’ (of which more is under-noted).
During the 1540s Alexander Schaw, Johnne’s father, died. (Williamson, in a footnote
on page 13 of his book, assesses this as an “earlier date than 1547”. For later figures
which Williamson was to state on page 19, Johnne would have had to have been born in
1535 with Alexander’s demise in 1542. Overall, there is some leeway in such dating.
Anyway, Johnne was young when becoming Laird of Greenock, although from when he
was resident in his Greenock caput is not clear as the family possessed several feudal
baronial estates, the chief one being Sauchie, in Clackmannanshire, where Johnne was
born and presumably, raised. His character, habits and predilections seem to have been
moulded under the strict supervision of his widowed mother, whose aegis also shielded
him from contamination by the cancerously corrupt, vicious Royal Court of that epoch.
Probably his upbringing explains, respectively, the underpinning essence of the motto
within his personal coat of arms: “I mean well”, plus his choice of the above-noted
voluntary work on behalf of the then nascent Protestant-Reformation Scottish Church.
4
Although this new church had broken away from the Roman Catholic Church, by which
it rejected the authority of its pontiff, the Pope, plus outlawed the holy mass and some
other doctrinal aspects of the Catholic denomination, nevertheless, at this point, the
‘reformed’ church retained the Roman Catholic Church concept of priests (but now
renamed as ‘ministers’) and bishops (now called ‘superintendents’) appointed by a
hierarchy. The church was thereby still orientated ‘episcopally’ (Latin: ‘epicopus’ =
bishop), which, within the concept of the hierarchy of such a denomination, would not
preclude the head of state being the appropriate head, likewise, of the church: this, in
Scotland’s case, its monarch. Therefore, Johnne would pass his mature years serving
an infant church wherein such an ecclesiastical philosophy - inclusive of monarchism -
still lingered. And, indeed, he might well have believed in this (or, at least, have not
been averse - and definitely not antagonistic - to it). Perhaps, he might have regarded
himself as a ‘moderate’ amongst church reformers, rather than a ‘zealot’ for revolution.
It would not be until 1592 - having by then expunged priests and other prelates, indeed,
execrated all of the trappings of Roman Catholicism - that a fully-fledged ‘Presbyterian’
system was formalised, although this had been, in effect, gaining incremental currency
as the intervening decades passed. (I.e. Protestantism came to Scotland by revolution,
Presbyterianism more by evolution.) ‘Presbyterianism’ (deriving from the Greek word
‘presbuteros’, meaning ‘elders’ (and this term construed in the context of being wise by
a lifetime’s experience) became enlisted to represent a type of ecclesiastical governance
based on rule by sagacious laymen. And herein - although, theoretically, representing a
rudimentary democracy - such rule was restricted to males. I.e. this was a patriarchal
church whose sacred rituals couldn’t (apparently) be trusted to any of the female sex!
The new church’s membership was assumed - indeed, enforced - to include potentially
everyone in the realm! Scottish Presbyterianism possessed a pyramidal structure of
legislative ‘courts’, all overlayered on top of its membership, these being, respectively:-
Kirk Session - one allowed per church, its composition being ‘elders’ drawn from
the congregation by existing ‘Session’ members or appointed by the congregation
itself, and the minister accorded the convenership with the title of ‘teaching elder’;
Presbytery - (hence the name of the system, as perhaps the most powerful day-to-
day ‘court’ of the church with responsibility to oversee the spiritual and temporal
conduct of the congregation.) one presbytery allowed per ‘parish’ (the latter term
representing the administrative ecclesiastical districts into which the entire country
was divided). A local presbytery was composed of ‘elders’, delegated by the ‘Kirk
Session’ of each church within the parish, who, from within their number, elected a
‘Presbytery Moderator’ (i.e. someone to moderate any debate which might become
heated!) Eventually, the members of a church’s congregation would have the right
to select their own minister, although subject to the relevant presbytery’s guidance;
Synod - the ‘court’ of administrative ecclesiastical ‘regions’, a region comprising a
number of parishes for which the same method of nomination to membership and
leadership prevailed as with presbyteries;
General Assembly - (the highest ‘court’ within the Church of Scotland) convened
annually with delegates from all of the subordinate categories, and a new overall
‘National Moderator’ appointed by all of the constituent churches each year.
However, how and where the monarchy fitted into this new ecclesiastical system was to
prove a running sore for all concerned…
5
16th century Scotland was blighted by acrimony between King James VI (who was later
to articulate his fundamental belief in ‘The Devine Right of Kings’ for him to rule in
Church and State answerable only to God) and an equally strident, ascendant Church of
Scotland parliamentarian regime which, in some ways, harboured similar despotic
aspirations! Anyway, this often led to partisan tussling over the demarcation of power
within the respective secular and heavenly realms. Indeed, sometimes it is difficult to
discern, thenabouts, which craved apotheosis more! Governance of the country was,
consequently, constantly contumacious and often adversarial betwixt King and Kirk.
In 1596 the tension and contention, festering over the years, climaxed in an altercation
between King James VI and a leading Presbyterian (in fact, he served several times as
National Moderator of the Church of Scotland) Andrew Melville. There the monarch
rebukingly reminded the clergyman of being the king’s vassal, particularly in matters
ecclesiastical. However, this provoked the unequivocal riposte: “Sire, we will always
humbly reverence Your Majesty in public, but having opportunity of being with Your
Majesty in private, we must discharge our duty or else be enemies to Christ!” Then a
punchline! “Sirrah, YE are God’s silly vassal! There are twa kings and twa kingdoms
in Scotland. There is King James, the head of the commonwealth [i.e. the secular
realm] and there is Christ Jesus, the King of the Church, whose subject James the sixth
is, and of whose kingdom he is not a king, nor a lord, nor a head, but a member!”
{Undoubtedly, King James VI would have preferred that the Church of Scotland had
remained (as indeed it had begun) within an ‘episcopal’ (i.e. bishop-based) mode: this,
in fact akin to the contemporary Church of England where much of the Roman Catholic
paraphernalia - such as bishops and archbishops, etc., had been retained within a
denomination ‘Reformed’ mainly by being independent of Rome, but of which the king,
not the Pope, was acknowledged as the anointed ‘head’. This was a situation in which
James would later revel when resident in England after succeeding to its throne in
1603. However, meantime, in the 1590s, it irked him to have it emphasised that, in
Scotland, he was not ‘head’ of the Presbyterian Church and that it was too powerful for
him to punish Andrew Melville by anything more than banishing him from his sight!}
Consequently, at the time when Johnne Schaw considered having a kirk within his own
domain (an active one not existing then), the Church of Scotland was still in the throes
of denominational ambivalence, swithering betwixt Protestant Episcopal and Protestant
Presbyterian, although the latter psyche would prevail - eventually, if incrementally.
“I mean well” would later become the habitual motto of all of Johnne Schaw’s lairdly
descendants. However, it does seem to manifest a heartfelt maxim of his personal
philosophy which, it might be surmised, gives some clue as to his motivation in various
delicate instances. Devout and sincere was; without ego and having humility.
Nevertheless, in light of the above-noted inflammatory atmosphere prevailing, Johnne
would also need to act with acumen and astuteness if attempting to reconcile loyalty to
both kirk and king protagonists, this never easy, and sometimes downright impossible!
In essence, the Presbyterian authority expected the king to give a lead to his people in
the State religion, but it abrogated to itself the right to be sole mentor and monitor of all
- including the king - in how this religion was promulgated and administrated. And it
wished this macrocosm at national level to be mirrored in microcosm at local level, with
the laird leading by example, but the ‘Kirk Session’ having sway over the behaviour of
everyone (laird included) in the parish - as will be encountered further in this narrative.
6
It must be said that the incipient Church of Scotland was no less inclined than the
Roman Catholic denomination which it had displaced, to deliberately - when it suited -
blur the distinction between religious heresy and criticism of the church’s doctrinal-
ideology, hierarchy and/or clergy. Brooking no dissenters, proponents of either
foregoing ‘fault’ might find themselves consigned to Hell when they would die, with
their soul damned for all Eternity! This was quite a profound deterrent where members
were inculcated that the Church’s leadership spoke, always, on behalf of the Godhead.
{Opposing a purely secular regime might result in persecution of one’s mortal body by
proponents of that regime, whereas opposing a religious regime risks reaction from
proponents of that regime, which could apparently jeopardise one’s immortal soul. So,
in addition to the many exercising such authority properly, the foregoing enabled those
possessing a church position to misappropriate this under the guise of religion. Such
abuse could lead to pettifogging bullying or, at higher level, even politicking.}
{Whereas the word ‘kirk’ - phonetically rendered in ‘Scots’ from the original Anglo-
Saxon, ‘ciric/circe’ for ‘church’ - had been used on occasion in connection with Roman
Catholic chapels, it began, henceforth, to be used primarily for Presbyterian places of
worship, in deliberate contradistinction for those of any other branch of Christianity.
Thus, the word ‘kirk’ would be used interchangeably with ‘church’ if referring to an
individual edifice, whereas‘The Kirk’ would become a synonym for the Church of
Scotland, or - later on - any other of its subsequent Presbyterian variant-derivatives.}
Originally, Johnne Schaw’s Greenock Barony plus all of his other landholdings were
accounted as part of the Parish of Innerkip (nowadays rendered as Inverkip) to whose
Parish Kirk, situated in the village of Innerkip some four miles distant over difficult
intervening terrain, Johnne - and every inhabitant within his lands - was expected to
attend every Sunday, all year round and in all weathers, it being the closest church to
them in the parish. This must annoy Johnne; and accounts for his subsequent actions.
In Daniel Weir’s ‘History of the Town of Greenock’ (1829), on page 12, relating to the
above-noted St. Lawrence Roman Catholic edifice, he states that “about 1670 the
chapel was in high preservation”. So, presumably, in Johnne’s day, it would have been
- arguably - possible to rehabilitate and convert it for use in a Presbyterian capacity.
The mindless wanton defacing of icons, frescos and statues, even the smashing-up of
buildings associated with the Roman Catholic Church which had marred the Christian
ethic and besmirched the ideals of the Reformation in its early 1550-1560s years, had,
by the 1580s, abated. Notwithstanding, there could be no question of Johnne risking
riling-up latent anti-Catholic prejudice which might thereby re-ignite such vandalism by
reconstituting a relic of the disavowed old religion, in order to fulfil his desired purpose.
Therefore, he must build a new kirk. And that is what, in 1589, he set in motion to do.
7
The Biblical Gospel of St. John, Chapter 1, Verse 1, states that, “In the beginning was
the Word”. ‘The word’ of this particular ‘beginning’ was to come, respectively, from
Johnne Schaw, Laird of Greenock. and King James [Stewart] VI of Scots.
Johnne Schaw wouldn’t normally have needed anyone’s permission, to build something
on his own land at his own expense. However, with his Greenock Barony being
incorporated within the Parish of Innerkip, if Johnne unilaterally set up a rival kirk to
that of Innerkip, this would undoubtedly have incurred legitimate, ferocious opposition
from the latter due to its consequential loss in control - also revenue. The latter was not
so much from the meagre offerings from the ordinary parishioners but from the’ stent’
(taxation, for upkeep of the fabric, levied against all landowners in the parish.) Johnne,
to forestall this anticipated protest, seems to have pre-emptively cleared the matter with
the appropriate church ‘courts’. His presbytery was, circa 1589, that of Dumbarton but
soon after would become that of Paisley. But, Johnne seems, also, to have gone even
higher in the Kirk’s hierarchy, soliciting support on this subject. And, as a clincher, he
then sought, for proceeding with his project, the assent of the monarch, King James VI.
There is no evidence that the two had ever met, so Johnne could not presume on any
grounds of acquaintanceship, far less friendship. His approach must simply be an
appeal by a loyal subject to his sovereign. As a clever strategy, he intimated intention
to undertake building the kirk but not asking for any royal financial contribution whilst,
nevertheless, deferring to the prerogative of the king to grant permission for it. Indeed,
thereby transferring to the king all credit and kudos would be a gesture to delight an
embattled monarch who could, consequently, appear to exert arbitration in the matter.
And, if that was indeed Johnne’s stratagem, it was about to pay off handsomely by his
receiving no mere letter of kingly assent to his project but, instead, a royal charter.
A charter was, within the feudal system, a ‘tool’ which may be defined as a document -
arraying in formal, legal terminology - the sovereign’s conveyance and/or confirmation
of ownership of land, and/or other property, and/or privileges, all delineated in precise
detail. Moreover, it would be recorded, in its essentials, in the ‘Register of the Privy
Seal’, so called as ‘the Great Seal of the Realm’ was used to cast a wax seal (one side
featuring the reigning monarch, the other depicting the Scottish Royal Coat of Arms)
affixed to all such official documents as a sign of their authentication. The charter,
now received by Johnne Schaw, was entered into the Register on 18th November, 1589.
The charter’s total verbatim content appears on pages 13-14 of Daniel Weir’s ‘History
of the Town of Greenock’ (1829). In George Williamson’s book, ‘Old Greenock’
(1888), its salient content appears, on pages 17-18, wherein Williamson translates the
16th century ‘Scots’ into modern English with, additionally, the text segregated by
semicolons which slightly helps to clarify the confusing syntax in some parts of the
original whose rambling is not helped by its total absence of punctuation throughout!
The charter preambles by a declaration of “JAMES by the grace of god king of Scots”
to his various administrative officials, then expresses his “being movit with the earnest
zeill and grite affection our lovit [typical royal platitude, devoid of significance!]
Johnne schaw of grenock” (who) “hes ay had to Goddis glorie and propagatioun of the
trew evangel sen(se) the first professioun of the samyn within this realme…”. Etc.
8
Johnne’s petition (either original or copy) to the king is not now available for scrutiny.
However, by reproducing its wording, the charter itself acknowledges that Johnne “is
willing nochd onlie on his awin coist to erect… ane parroche kirk upon his awin
heritage but also to appoint and designe manss and yeard to the samyn” (i.e. manse and
graveyard)… with the whole profit “belonging to the kirk for the help and supporte of
the sustentation of ane minister” (i.e. for providing a stipend or salary for the latter.)
The charter also rehearses the justification that Johnne must have made to the king in
his petition, ostensibly (and perhaps actually) made on behalf of the plight of “the puir
pepill duelling upon his lands” which “are all fischers” (this can only be true of the men
of Greenock village as those of the extensive inland area of Johnne’s landholding would
be, instead, involved in farming) “and of a ressonable nowmber duelland four miles fra
their parroche kirk” (i.e. Innerkip) “and, having a greit river to pas over to the samyn,
may have an ease in winter… to convene to goddis service on the sabboth day…”
(Actually, the only single aquatic obstacle, the ‘greit river’ cited in the charter - which
can be assumed to be the River Kip - becomes pluralised, as ‘diverse burns and waters’
in a clerical minute, formulated in a later re-affirmed justification for having a kirk, this
reproduced in ‘The History of Greenock’ (1921), by Robert Murray Smith. On page
244, it states: “Of auld, ‘Greenock’ was a pairt and pertinent of the parroche of Innerkip
and… far distant frome the Kirk of Innerkip four large myles with dyveris great burns
and watteris in the way, quhill (which) in the winter sessone are unpassable”.
McArthur, in common with all historians and folklorists of Inverkip, uses the name
‘Auldkirk’ to signify the ancient church of Innerkip in order to distinguish it from its
ecclesiastical successor which was inaugurated in the early years of the 19th century
after the ‘auldkirk’ had become ruinous, with “the roof leaking, the once stout walls
weakened” so that, as McArthur notes on page 7 of his booklet, “services were held at
times in the open air”. The landed family connected with it and the appurtenant village
and Feudal Barony of Innerkip were the Lindsays of Dunrod (of which more, later, will
appear in this narrative, of one member of the family in connection with witchcraft.
Anyway, to revert to the Greenock situation of the 16th century, it was certainly true,
that, despite age or infirmity, man, woman and child must endure a muddy trudge - as
few would possess horses - often wading through such icy streams in spate when
travelling to Sunday church services. Attendance was theoretically compulsory during
that era when (likely unaffordable) fines would be levied for any unauthorised absence.
Nevertheless, could this ordinance by the church authorities really be strictly enforced
ubiquitously throughout the extensive rural hinterland? Or would it be practical only
within the village of Greenock and its environs? The charter does, after all, refer only
to ‘fischers’; presumably the coastal dwellers. Also, anyway, could Innerkip Kirk have
accommodated, simultaneously, everyone resident within Innerkip Parish at that date?
9
The royal charter goes on to reproduce an assertion by Johnne - presumably within his
petition to the king - of his proposal to build a kirk having been “allowit to proceed…
baith by the generall assemblie of the kirk and synodall assemblie”. It would be
interesting to learn how Johnne was able to procure such a hierarchal consent - although
assuredly, it would be a correct protocol in such a case - and why this evoked no protest
from Innerkip Kirk Session. Was the latter even aware of this negotiation occurring?
Anyway, in light of all of the foregoing, the king “…gantand and commitand to the said
Johnne schaw of Grenock Oure full power and speciall libertie and licence to erect …
the said kirk... upoun ony pairt or place within the bounds of his awin landis” where he
shall think most commodious and convenient, “to be callit the parroche kirk of grenok”.
Furthermore, in light of Johnne’s expected large financial outlay in fulfilling his project,
the charter excuses him “his airis and tennents… fra all keeping and convening to their
auld parroche kirk in ony tymes cuming bot at their owin will and pleasr… An declairis
them to be frie and perpetuallie exonrit and dischairgit of all charge… in stent bigging
butting” [taxation towards building/repairing] “or ony other manner… in tyme coming”.
In summary, Johnne, through the terms the foregoing charter, gained, cumulatively:-
The king’s enthusiastic endorsement for his wish to build a kirk on his own land,
plus an excellent character reference, citing him for selfless devotion to religion;
The king as a personal champion against any backlash from Innerkip Kirk Session;
The king’s acceptance of his claim to have the support of the Church of Scotland in
establishing his kirk; a fait accompli that would also not be in the Kirk hierarchy’s
interest to later contest and jeopardise this new church that it would want anyway;
Permanent exemption from financial obligation towards Innerkip Kirk and Parish,
even despite that, at this date, his landholding still remained part of Innerkip Parish,
such a considerable concession defraying the expense of his building his new kirk;
A royal command for this new church ‘to be callit the parroche kirk of grenok’
which tacitly paved the way for a follow-up creation of a ‘Parish of Greenock’;
Undoubted gratitude from his tenants (by relieving them of an arduous journey) on
whom (he doubtless appreciated) he relied upon for support in all of his endeavours.
Nevertheless, there is no indication that his seeking a kirk on his own land was in
response to a plea from his tenantry rather than it being entirely his unilateral wish.
In 1592 a parliamentary act, known as the ‘Great Charter’ is now accepted as having
effectively consolidated the Church of Scotland as the national Established Church.
Purely co-incidentally, another 1592 act retrospectively recorded for: “Johnne Schaw of
grenock his Maiesties full power… and licence… to erect… ane kirk...”, this obviously
synthesising the terms of Johnne’s royal charter. By this happenstance, Johnne’s kirk
can claim to be the first kirk to have been ratified by the post-Reformation Scottish
Established Church. However, it would not have been the first kirk, nor the only one,
built during the three decades since the Reformation had begun in Scotland in 1560.
As previously noted, Johnne was among ecclesiastical ‘commissioners’ for promoting
just such new church building and, presumably, he plus his colleagues in this role had
met with considerable success during this era of Church of Scotland major expansion.
10
Moreover, probably such other new churches had been inaugurated without any need to
to obtain either royal (or parliamentary) assent. Johnne’s kirk is thereby very special
As a belated, but direct, derivative from the royal charter to Johnne of 1589, in 1594, a
further Act of Parliament, created a new ‘Parish of Greenock’, this by carving it out
from the Parish of Innerkip. The Presbytery of Innerkip, in light of the royal charter
depriving it of Johnne’s stent towards upkeep of Innerkip Church, doubtless, would not
complain; indeed, would have been pleased to be rid of this now unprofitable territory!
The new parish would coincide with all of Johnne Schaw’s landholdings, namely:
Greenock, Finnart and Spango. That would have afforded an optimal consolidation of
the ecclesiastical with secular authority throughout his domain, this - in theory anyway -
conducive to good governance and control. Unfortunately, Johnne wouldn’t personally
long benefit as he “died in July or August, 1594, two months after the disjunction of the
parish, and before he had attained his 60th year, having possessed the estate 52 years.”
(I.e. Greenock Barony estate.). Thus computes George Williamson, in ‘Old Greenock’,
on page 19. Johnne was succeeded in his various estates by his son: James Schaw.
In doing the foregoing, Johnne’s motivation might have been venial, contriving to give
the king - even conniving with the king - a pretext that enabled the latter to obtrude into
kirk business, wily underhandedness intended, by Johnne, to concurrently curry royal
favour and gain influence in the Church. Or it may be charitable to contemplate it as
him seeking to reconcile both of his loyalties, epitomising his ‘I mean well’ philosophy:
but notwithstanding, this coupled with being a shrewd strategist in getting his own way!
It has been noted above that Johnne’s landholding was not restricted only to Greenock.
within the town of Greenock. Finnart Barony seems to have had a diffused population.
Moreover, it was bereft of any large nucleus-settlement similar to Greenock Barony’s
population hub - this dating from quite early times - i.e. the village named Greenock.
In 1539, the royal architect to King James V, Sir James Hamilton (and who, at the
foregoing date urgently needed money), had ‘pawned’ Finnart Barony of which he was
laird, to Johnne Schaw’s father, Sir Alexander Schaw of Sauchie (Clackmannanshire).
Alexander, in addition to Sauchie, was also the laird of Greenock (Wester) Barony.
However, this pawning would be transmuted to an outright grant to Alexander by King
James V of Scots in 1540, after Hamilton had been executed - due to trumped-up
accusations of plotting regicide - and all of his properties forfeited to the Crown. From
Alexander, Johnne Schaw inherited both of Greenock and Finnart Baronies, so was
laird of both, although he was designated usually only as ‘Johnne Schaw of Greenock’.
The kirk was situated in the east of its encompassing graveyard. Much of the latter lies
now below the carpark of the neighbouring supermarket (from the top tier of whose
carpark this photo was taken). The graveyard stretched - at least at its southernmost
extent, almost across to the present-day Dalrymple Street, and, westwards, it bordered
onto the part of Laird Street which runs between Dalrymple Street and Container Way.
Actually, the distance between the kirk and the shore of the River Clyde did not, of
yore, even reach the front of the bingo hall which, along with its companion cinema
situated to its right, is built on land which was reclaimed from the river in the 1840s.
The course of the West Burn lies now underground, just to the left of the cinema. This
means that that, Johnne Schaw’s kirk, at the date of its construction in 1589-91, was
actually situated, not in Greenock Barony but within Finnart Barony by at least hundred
or so paces. However, it was not Johnne’s petition to the king seeking permission to
12
build his kirk but, ironically the royal assent to it which, by stipulating that the edifice
“be callit the parroche kirk of grenok”, inadvertently created the anomaly of the kirk’s
descriptor being a mismatch with its actual location at the time of its inauguration!
To be semantic, the so called Parish Kirk of Greenock (per royal edict) should more
accurately be rendered as the Kirk of Greenock Parish except that there was not any
Greenock Parish at the date of the charter: and, just to confound and confuse the matter
further, the kirk was not actually (at the time of construction) built in Greenock Barony!
The above-note royal assent to Johnne’s petition also affirmed that it could be “upoun
ony pairt or place within the bounds of his awin landis”, which, of course, did
include the Finnart Feudal Barony. Notwithstanding, there was, at that date, adequate
unoccupied space between Rue End and the West Burn, which - even if leaving a
suitable distance for sake of hygiene between the village and the graveyard - the kirk
and its graveyard could have been accommodated totally within Greenock Barony,
thereby making it in truth the “kirk of grenok”. Furthermore, building it there would
have saved Johnne the expense - additional to that of building the kirk “on his awin
coist” - of having to provide a bridge in order to enable Greenockians to access the kirk
dryshod over the West Burn. This is
nowadays a tame trickle (as the photo here
shows) by comparison to a broad torrent of
yesteryear owing to its headwaters having
been drawn off elsewhere since. Also, the
burn was once so wide that its estuary
served as a harbour where fishermen
brought their boats. A bridge of few
planks would not have sufficed to span the
divide, moreover, to enable the boat-masts
clearance to sail beneath it. (The photo of
the outlet was taken before construction of the ‘Greenock Ocean Terminal’ pontoon.)
Also, the illustration depicts the church as having a steeple which was, indeed, a feature
by the later date of the etching but was not present in the early structure of the kirk.
Both the bridge and kirk are depicted as being located exactly on the shoreline. But,
that too is figurative rather than strictly accurate. As above-noted, although the site of
the kirk and bridge were closer to the riverbank than nowadays due to land reclamation,
notwithstanding, they were never situated directly on the shoreline. There was always
a corridor of land in between. The bridge was upstream of the wide estuary of the
West Burn - maybe about Dalrymple Street, as shown on early 19th century maps, viz:-
Left
Below
The maps contrast too how, in just 11 years, the original track to the kirk had become
crowded with other streetways. Throughout the duration of the kirk’s proximity to the
West Burn it was known alternatively, for that stretch of its course, as the ‘Kirk Burn’.
could be ruminating on the theme of his sermon for the coming Sunday!) Anyway,
there was a legal requirement for the glebe to be of a certain size.
At the time - as George Williamson, in his book ‘‘Old Greenock’ (1888 edition), notes
on page 36 - Johnne Schaw protested to the Presbytery (although it is not clear if his
expostulation was accepted) that he should not have to carry the financial burden alone
for making such a provision, and that it ought to be shared by all of the other ‘heritors’
(i.e. proprietors of inheritable estates) within the Presbytery of Paisley to which
Greenock, after exiting from the Innerkip one, at that time, belonged.
Over and above the foregoing, there was a legal stipulation for any allocated glebe to be
located contiguous or close to the kirk involved. Although that would still have been
practical on the Greenock side of the West Burn, it might have been argued by Johnne
that, for some reason it was not convenient and thus he could not fulfil the condition of
adjacency for glebe and kirk if it were all to be located within the Barony of Greenock.
And the foregoing seems to be the nub of the facile excuse which George Williamson,
also on pages 36-37 of his book, hints on behalf of Johnne, despite questioning why the
laird - having cited kirk-bound Greenockians having to cross a large “unpassable” burn
on route to church in Innerkip as a justification for building his new kirk - should,
incongruously, be quite prepared to substitute another large burn which he must now
anyway bridge! Williamson - as though to re-assure himself, then writes on page 37:
“The difficulty connected with the unpassableness of the [West] burn would appear to
have been met by throwing bridge over the stream near the church, to connect the
Kirktown or New Town with the Old Town. This bridge, we do not doubt, is the one
represented in the earliest extant pictorial view of Greenock(1768) being sufficient to
span the burn, and allow the free passage of a considerable volume of water, which then
rose very rapidly after heavy rain, as it still does…” (The flow - as noted-above - has
very much reduced today from Williamson’s 1888 time of writing.)
Anyway, in the interim since, the two communities have in fact long since coalesced,
but Finnart’s submergence into Greenock has effectively eclipsed even remembrance,
locally, of it as a former entity in its own right. Nevertheless, it would be 1670 before
Finnart’s Barony would be finally, legally and inextricably annexed into Greenock’s.
To revert to the glebe: it probably covered an area occupied by today’s Clarence, Haig
and Roslin Streets, although there appears to be no existing map to be found, illustrating
its delineation.
Johnne Schaw’s kirk began public worship on Sunday morning, October 4th ,
1591, with, officiating, the Reverend Andrew Murdo(ch) of whom little is now known.
15
Second Phase : Kirk of Greenock Parish : 1591 - 1617 : the early years
The new kirk’s structure was initially a basic oblong box, constructed - anyway its
foundations - out of handy boulders from the nearby Clyde River-shore, closer to it than
later due to sizeable land reclamation since. The building possibly had a barrel-shaped
stone roof, certainly unglazed window apertures and a packed-down earthen floor.
The above-noted glimpse into this long past period is afforded by Jess. S. Bolton
through her book, ‘The Old West Kirk, 1591-1991’, (1991), on its pages 7 and 9.
She continues by indicating that on either side of the interior, for listening to the oft
long-winded sermonising of preachers thenabouts, “long wooden forms on either side
of a plain wooden table were for accommodation of the male sex only.” Womenfolk,
apparently, were expressly forbidden to sit upon the latter and “must bring with them
‘ane stool to sit upon or be content to sit low upon the floor.’” They must not “lie
down in the kirk on their face in time of prayer, sleeping… or they would be roused by
the beadle [a church official]. He “had other duties such as carrying a ‘red wand’ in
church to remove greetin bairns furth of the kirk”! (Herein were two consequences
clearly exhibiting congregational boredom!)
One seat that no churchgoer would want to occupy was every Presbyterian kirk’s ‘stool
of repentance’, out in front of the congregation, shamed in the glare of neighbours, to be
upbraided for setting a bad example - lambasted by the minister, lowering above in the
adjacency of the pulpit - for misdemeanours which could be civil as well as religious.
{The church regime held itself to be the arbiter of all morality, even general behaviour.
Unfortunately, this could afford licence for those who, by purporting piety, insinuated
themselves into the Kirk Session, to thereafter, as bullies, intimidate, or, as busybodies,
snoop on ordinary congregational members, under the guise of regulating rectitude.}
16
Biblical edicts were pedantically interpreted and punitively promulgated; such as that
within the Book of Exodus, Chapter 20, Verse 10, wherein it was enjoined of Sunday
as: “the Sabbath of the Lord thy God; in it thou shalt not do any work; thou, nor thy son,
nor thy daughter, nor thy manservant, nor thy maidservant”; etc. Even drawing water
from a well on that day would be accounted a holy sin with the transgressor punished
by being, for some consecutive Sunday services, degraded on the ‘stool of repentance’.
The above-noted ‘cutty stool’ was the name for a particular type of stool of repentance.
In order to stand on the most uneven of floors, it was
normally three-legged but could be four: it was usually
round topped but could be square . ‘Cutty’ - related to
‘cut’ - is in ‘Scots’ that language’s word for ‘short’.
The seat’s appearance, resembling/replicating a milking
stool, enabled it to be easily procured from the local
carpenter who - even with rudimentary woodworking
tools - would be well practised in crafting such items
due to many local households keeping a milk-cow. A
kirk probably had one on permanent, indeed prominent
display as a salutary warning to the congregation of its
penal purpose but also having several replicas in reserve
for those Sundays burdened with multiple miscreants!
{Equally as readily made and as acquirable as the cutty stool - but less often enlisted
for exposing penitents - might be the above-noted creepie stool. In the case of either
stool being thus used, especially if the malefactor were a man - squatting upon it with
knees up to his chin, he must feel - in addition to
being humiliated - emasculated by relegation to
this female and/or child’s seating-mode!}
Social civic ‘control’ of Greenock Parish’s populace was further reinforced by a large
bell, located on the kirk roof and activated by a rope or chain from ground level.
17
George Williamson’s ‘Old Greenock’ on pages 27-8, tells of how, with a peal loud
enough to be heard from the village, it tolled for funerals and as the advent to Sunday
services. However, it also re-enforced the peremptory caveat that, by decree of the
‘Kirk Session’ - as the regulatory body of the kirk comprising of its wisest (ostensibly)
and ecclesiastically esteemed members (males only!) - “it is appointed that sitting in
and haunting taverns on Friday and Saturday nights be abstained from after 9 of the
clock at which time the bell of the kirk is… rung to give advertisement to all to repair to
their own homes.” This blunt proscription menacingly observed, furthermore, that
backsliders in obeying this command would be dealt with upon the following Sabbath!
When the original bell cracked, its 1677 replacement - 18 inches across the mouth and
14 inch inside - was familiarly called ‘Tam o lang’ in onomatopoeic mimic of its clang.
In 1617, the Barony of Easter Greenock - which bordered that of Greenock Barony on
its east - had been dis-enjoined from the Parish of Kilbirnie and added to that of
Greenock Parish. This was a subsidiary estate of the Craufurd Laird of Kilbirnie.
When the last male of that line died in 1661, it passed to his daughter who wished to
sell. There is no record of her having taken anything to do with Johnne Schaw’s kirk.
The pan-Greenock religious alignment was greatly strengthened in 1669 when Johnne
Schaw’s great-grandson, John Schaw, bought most of Easter Greenock, the exception
being a western sliver of land sandwiched between the newly purchased territory and
the Barony of (Wester) Greenock. That same year, this enclave was erected as the
Barony of Cartsburn in favour of Thomas Crawfurd, a Glasgow merchant-burgess,
whose elevation thereby to lairdship within the parish, brought to him entitlements and
responsibilities with regard to its kirk, equivalent to those of the Schaw lairds. These
he seems to have fully embraced. (As noted previously, proprietors of inheritable
estates, having a connection with the church within the parish involved, were termed
‘heritors’. So, there were now two such active ones within the Parish of Greenock.)
{The surname ‘Crawfurd’ was then often spelled as ‘Craufurd’ but nowadays is usually
found spelt as ‘Crawford’. However, spelling, even of one’s name (in an era prior to
bureaucracy entering into everything - as now!) of old, was never consistent within the
nuclear family, nor even as used by any family individual. The Kilbirnie branch
affected, indiscriminately, both ‘Craufurd’ and Crawfurd, whereas the Cartsburn
offshoot seem to have adhered primarily to the latter form, although the former one will
also be found in the writings of some historians in referring to them. Moreover, often
Crawfurd lairds of Cartsburn are designated, instead, as Crawfurd of Craufurdsburn.}
Due to the aforenoted extension, the Greenock Parish area now coincided with that of
Greenock town, prior to the development of its outlying districts in the 20th century.
Yet, it still had only a single small kirk whose ability to cope with the consequent
population increase well outstripped its capacity. To meet the challenge, the two lairds
proposed and promised substantial enlargements of the building, but their subsequent
vacillation, prevarication and acrimony now, unfortunately, inhibits accurate assessment
in the timetable of implementation. Nevertheless, the next century did see favourable
changes which would render the kirk no longer so crude and simplistic a structure.
18
Witch hunting epoch casts a sinister shadow over the Church of Scotland
Another extract from the Biblical Book of Exodus - with ramifications far more severe
than banning work on Sundays - would be subject to ecclesiastical misappropriation,
not only in Scotland - where it was a blight straddling an epoch - but throughout all of
Europe: this namely, Chapter 22, Verse 18: “Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live”!
In 1563, witchcraft was made illegal in Scotland with a parliamentary act initiated for
inflicting the death-penalty on “all who should make use, in any form, of witchcraft,
sorcery or necromancy.” Exploitation of this holy writ, in vindicating the then male-
centric Scottish Government’s hostility to any female empowerment, materialised in
vindictively targeting the community’s ‘wise women’ who, for aeons, had gleaned, and
honed empirical skills in childbirth and contraception (fertility then had an aura of being
magical) and creating herbal remedies for treating the ailments of both sexes: a ‘healer’.
Egocentric male theologians - self-styled ‘God’s elect’ - could not tolerate that mere
women should be independent of male supremacy and possessed of esoteric knowledge.
So they miscalled this all ‘black magic’ and therefore heretical, denigrating its talented
benefactors as harridans who cast malevolent spells, and concocted noxious - or at least
spurious - potions, which they either utilised for evil purposes or sold to the gullible.
In 1558, John Knox - often a demagogic evangelist within the Scottish Reformation –
published in 1558: ‘The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstruous Regiment of
Women’, a misogynistic polemic attacking female monarchs (aimed specifically at
Mary Queen of Scots) claiming that rule by women was contrary to Biblical scripture.
Nevertheless, it not clear if he, in any way, influenced formulation of the ‘Witchcraft
Act’. By contrast, King James VI not only inveighed against witches but interrogated
brutally at least one of those so accused, in 1591. This royal precedent (the same year
that Johnne’s kirk opened) saw incepted a vicious witch-hunt of national proportions.
‘Hounding’ of alleged suspects became the ‘sport’ of some perverts, baiting to extract a
‘confession’ under duress by crushing fingers and other cruelties: the ‘fun’ of sadists!
Religious mania, lasting until the early 18th century, was rabble-roused into a frenzied
hysteria with an unhealthy public ‘entertainment’ encouraged by ‘the Church’ + State
through gratuitous mob-ogling of those convicted of witchery being whipped, branded
or otherwise mutilated, strangled, burned in a pyre, ritualistically drowned, or hanged.
Many innocents, throughout Scotland, and beyond (although Scotland’s record was
particularly bad) suffered such a fate, including those in the categories listed below:
female homeopathic practitioner-savants in medicine and midwifery as above-noted;
guileless (often young) lassies, led astray in defiant antidote to the kirk’s repressive
attitude toward normal enjoyments and enforced docility, who were titillated in their
drab lives by participating in exciting, erotic orgies, involving ostensibly worshiping
the Devil (a man dressed up): deplorable conduct and sacrilegious - but not satanic;
women and girls of all ages who were blameless in anything to do with the occult
but who were maliciously denounced - under false pretences with ulterior motives
for spiteful reasons, e.g. envy/jealousy - by others, usually of their own gender.
{Females might also be targeted out of political or financial expediency. In 1637 King
James V would contrive the execution of Lady Janet Douglas by insinuating that she
meditated regicide by poison or witchcraft: “For the whilk treasonable crimes the said
19
Janet be forfaulted (i.e. forfeited) to our sovereign Lord, her life, lands goods, moveable
and immoveable, and that she had to the Castle-hill of Edinburgh, and there burnt in
ane fire to the dead as ane traitor.” I.e. cynical exploitation of the hyped spectre of
witchcraft as Janet’s alleged method to assassinate the king, provided the latter with a
method for him to ‘legally assassinate’ the lady, simply in order to steal her wealth!}
Ironically, contrasting the aforenoted, there were women and men who exalted in being
practitioners of witchcraft of the dastardly sort, giddily intoxicated by their imagined
possession of pernicious powers, who, in this superstitions era, by their maledictions
and machinations, mentally traumatised not only society’s simpletons but an entire
population, indoctrinated into believing that they could thus be bewitched and harmed.
Moreover, much more dangerous was a knowledge of poisonous plants that some such
would-be witches did use in schemes to sicken and/or kill victims and/or their animals.
A coterie of such nasty witchery practitioners existed in the Parish of Innerkip in the
17th century, the most notorious being the self-confessed Marie or Mary Lamont who, in
1662, was burned alive - a sentence more barbaric and nefarious than the offense itself -
probably in front of the Auldkirk of Innerkip! (Marie, at just 18, would nowadays be
‘diagnosed’ as just in adolescent rebellion, spurning society’s mores.) Her accomplices
included a couple from Greenock: Margret M’kenzie in Greinok and Kattrein Scot in
Murdiestean (Murdieston), whose fate, however, does not seem to have been recorded.
And one other such is worth highlighing. In the early 17th century, Alexander Lindsay,
was laird of the ancient Feudal Barony of Dunrod (this owned by the Lindsay family, as
previously noted)… The barony incorporated Innerkip village. Alexander, the witches
and its venerable ‘Auldkirk’ were all interrelated in a rhyme which contains the lines:-
“In Auldkirk the witches ride thick, And in Dunrod they dwell;
But the greatest loon amang them a’ was Auld Dunrod himsel’!”
‘Auld Dunrod’ - as a charlatan - reputedly sold favourable winds, also protection from
the Devil, to sailors and fishermen, credulous in an age when wind and water were still
widely believed to be controlled by sprites, kelpies and other vexatious fairy beings.
Nevertheless, due to gender discrimination, even today, while witches are traduced as
hideous and heinous, wizards are usually represented as virtuous in doing good. Such
stereotyping is re-enforced in children’s perception by the celebration of Hallowe’en
regarding witches, and ‘Merlin’ (per the story of ‘King Arthur’, etc.) regarding wizards.
Sturgeon, First Minister of today’s Scottish Parliament, has, also, apologised formally
for an "egregious historic injustice” perpetrated by Scotland’s then parliament.}
{RAWS seeks a posthumous pardon for all affected. But a ‘pardon’, in Law, implies an
offence committed but the penalty munificently waived. Whereas the delinquent but
repentant Marie might qualify for this, the incorrigibly iniquitous ‘Auld Dunrod’ would
not! A pardon is equally inappropriate for those totally innocent of witchery (in its evil
connotation), whereas legal ‘exoneration’, to quash wrongful conviction, would befit.}
During the timespan of Inverkip’s problems, its derivative, Greenock Parish with its by
now own ‘auld kirk’, seems, by contrast, not to have been convulsed by such strife. At
least there is no record of such dreadful excesses. Indeed, in spite of the foregoing
apparent predilection with public penance as spectated by churchgoers on the ‘cutty
stool’, Greenock kirk’s ministers, to their credit, apparently concentrated on preaching
the Gospel, disseminating the teachings of Jesus Christ. The Schaw lairds, too, seem to
have stood aloof from this hysterical craze…However, a great-great grandson of the
kirk’s founder, Johnne, i.e. Sir John Schaw of Greenock, (2nd Baronet) - did become
embroiled in witchery, although not in a direct Greenock context: this as follows...
It was recorded how she vomited pins and other detritus (this, obviously, hidden by her,
furtively, in her mouth to be regurgitated in front of an audience). And, thereupon also,
she would scream out of being under attack by people whom she named but who no one
else could actually see, because they were, in fact, not present! Nevertheless, absurdly,
such unilateral testimony, given by alleged witchcraft victims, was deemed unnecessary
to corroborate in a court of law and so was, for those thus accused, impossible to refute!
As a symptom, not so easy to fake, however, often the lassie’s limbs - in fact her whole
body - became rigid. She assuredly manifested an alarming physical psychosis but,
whether this was self-induced shamming, as an attention-seeking impostor, or a mental
illness, has been a matter for speculation ever since. Nevertheless, whatever caused her
fits, etc., the upshot of her wild accusations, implicating all sorts of people, resulted in
over twenty people accused, with seven innocents being executed in 1697 and the rest
stigmatised. A travesty for which deviant religion must be traduced as the root-cause!
Sir John Schaw’s involvement in this affair was as one among several commissioners,
evaluating the ‘evidence’ from both Christian herself and those accused by her.
Witchcraft trials would rumble on for almost another forty years. However, it is now
meet to revert to the original chronology and to take up the story of Johnne Schaw’s
kirk in yet another episode, with national origins, which threatened to overwhelm it.
21
Third Phase : West Kirk : 3rd June, 1685 : testing times and a narrow escape
After the bloody and brutal religious wars of the 16th into 17th century, the ‘Restoration
of the Monarchy’ - in Scotland and England - in the person of King Charles II is usually
hailed now as a relief, characterised by the latter’s soubriquet in history as the ‘Merry
Monarch’ due to the hedonism of his royal court. A libertine yes, but any reputation of
him as thus ‘laid-back’, and so blessed with religious tolerance, is entirely misplaced!
The foregoing, nevertheless, was about to be tested again now, and even found wanting.
In 1650 Charles II, displaced from kingship in England by Oliver Cromwell’s ‘republic’
there, was compelled to sign acceptance of ‘the Covenant ‘as a condition of being
crowned King of Scots and thereby gaining Scotland as an ally in a bid to regain his
English Crown. That hope was terminated by the defeat of his largely Scottish army of
farm-labourer conscripts by the well-trained, veteran military machine of ‘Cromwell’s
Ironsides’ at the Battle of Worcester in 1651. This had forced Charles to flee into exile
abroad until, upon Cromwell’s death, he was invited back as English monarch in 1660.
Thereupon, he very soon revealed his mercenary cynicism to the Scots by retracting his
‘Covenant’ support to pursue a déjà vu policy, as ruthless as that of his regal ancestors,
by foisting legislation onto the Church of Scotland, to create an Episcopal framework.
Thus, in 1661, acts were pushed through both the Scottish and English parliaments in
effect condemning Presbyterianism outright and replacing it with Episcopacy. The
date of 24th August, 1662 was set for clergy either to conform to the new regimen or be
expelled from their ministerial incumbencies. How this could have been managed
through a Scottish Parliament seems inconceivable but, once again, it exemplifies the
inappropriate power of monarchy interfering in Scottish church affairs.
Many of those detesting this legislation defected from the subsequently debased church
and became ‘Covenanters’, convening (in ‘conventicles’) for illegal, hence clandestine
worship; such gatherings dispersed by marauding State troopers with attendees not only
harassed but often slaughtered, in a period which became known as the ‘killing times’.
“The well known Alexander Peden is said to have held a field preaching in Greenock
among other places in the West Of Scotland.” So avers George Williamson, in ‘Old
Greenock’, in a footnote on page 60, his information deriving from hearsay description
by an old woman from which he conjectures the site as “in the line of Hamilton Street,
at that time agricultural land”; i.e. approximately where Greenock’s Oak Mall now
stands. No date is known for this event but ‘Sandy’ Peden - one of the expelled
ministers who became a celebrated itinerant preacher, charismatic orator and fugitive
due to this - was very active in this way till about 1673 when he had to flee to Ireland.
22
Dissenters mustered for armed resistance - these being mainly peasants against veteran
soldiers - with battles in which they, consequently, were consistently defeated and
sustained large casualties. Individuals suspected of partaking in any the foregoing
resistance activities would be accosted by State troopers at home and, if declining to
recant Presbyterianism, were murdered on their doorsteps. David Steele, a relative of
“Mr. Robert Steele, ordained as minister of the Old West Kirk in 1792”, was, according
to George Williamson, on page 103 of ‘Old Greenock’, “shot before the door of his own
house”. Such summary executions - blatant unpunished murders - were commonplace.
Williamson, on page 54 of his book ‘Old Cartsburn’, tells how, not content with such
savagery, this rapacious king, to further impel his precepts, in 1681, initiated an odious
‘Test Act’, respectively, to enforce the dogma of the royal ‘Divine Right’ in religion; to
extract fines for non-compliance in signing affirmation of the Act’s conditions; and “to
create a reign of terror throughout the country. Its prosecution spared neither rank, age,
nor sex; husbands being held liable for their wives, and masters for their servants. It
was chiefly, however, against the landed proprietors that the proceedings were directed
as they were considered best able to pay the exorbitant fines imposed”.
In ‘Old Greenock’, on page 76, Williamson notes that the oath must be “taken on the
knees, by all persons in public trust”: i.e. they must be seen to supplicate, indeed grovel.
Moreover that - in a collaboration perfidious to Presbyterian principle - “Its observance
was strongly enforced by Presbyteries.”! The Church was thus in sycophantic discord!
So much for the tribulations faced by the newer heritor family of the ‘Kirk of Greenock’
(as it now could be truly termed called since Finnart’s formal annexation into Greenock
of 1670). But, how did its original heritor family fare in this divisive predicament?
The contemporaneous scion was Sir John Schaw of Greenock, great grandson of Johnne
Schaw, founder of the kirk. His title of address as ‘Sir’ derived from heroic service at
the Battle of Worcester in England in 1651, fighting on behalf of Charles II, when
leading a contingent of 200 men drawn from his estates, whereafter he’d been knighted
on the battlefield - just prior to that monarch fleeing from it! Past service did not seem
to count in the new circumstances. Williamson, in ‘Old Greenock’, page 74, states that
“On 10th December, 1683… Sir John Schaw of Greenock, and about twenty other lairds
were indicted “for treason, rebellion, and favour to rebels.” (i.e. they were assisting, or
not resisting, the ‘Covenanters’.) However, Williamson concludes, per page 75, that
“Sir John had his own services to plead, and probably did so; at all events, the charges
23
were not further heard of.” Nevertheless, this illustrates how shortsighted Charles II’s
fanatical policy was, due to it potentially estranging subjects otherwise inherently loyal
to him, even when such adherence ran contrary to the core ‘Covenant’ of their church.
Also disenchanted by this royal policy was Archibald Campbell, 9th Earl of Argyle,
chief of Clan Campbell. He refused to subscribe to the Test Act, was condemned to
death for treason, escaped from incarceration and absconded to Holland where he
prepared with other similar exiles, plans for an uprising in Scotland to be concurrent
with a one in England to be led by the also banished Duke of Monmouth (actually a
nephew of the king whom he hoped to depose!) However, the venture was blighted
from the outset. Monmouth’s invasion - supposedly in sync with Argyle’s - was fatally
delayed (ultimately failing with bloody reprisals and Monmouth’s execution). And, in
Scotland, Clan Campbell - capable of thousands of warriors - failed to rise for its chief.
{In the clan era, Gaels - although nominally of one religious denomination or another
(usually that of their chief) - were lacklustre about ‘doctrinal sectarianism’ as a valid
reason for combating with anybody! Many, regularly, additionally practised the pagan
customs that predated Christianity, preferring to retain and so accrue the good offices
of all ‘deities’, thereby offending none! This happy - arguably sensible - philosophy
prevailed till the post-clan era (from the mid-18th century onwards). Thereafter, the
SSPCK (Scottish Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge) was formed by Royal
Charter in 1709 for the purpose of founding schools “where religion and virtue might
be taught to young and old” in the Highlands and other “uncivilised” areas of the
country, such schools deemed a valuable addition to the Church of Scotland
programme of education in Scotland. It introduced/inculcated acute discrimination
among pupils regarding the denominational aspect of practising Christian religion.}
Anyway, lacking Campbell help, the Earl of Argyle’s co-insurgents - from a campaign
base in June 1685, at Rothesay, Island of Bute - in desperation now urged attempting to
raise a rebellion in the Lowlands. In an affray, flattered by the description of ‘Battle of
Greenock’ but scarcely a skirmish, recourse is herein made to interpolating accounts.
Stephen M. Carter, sets the scene for the incident, in his book, ‘Fighting for Liberty’
(2020), on page 57, here synthesised: On June 3rd, two ships, containing approximately
two hundred men, sailed up the Firth of Clyde, in an expedition, respectively, to
reconnoitre the readiness (or otherwise) of the coastal defences; to send messages to
Lowland supporters; and, if possible, to purloin vital foodstuffs plus to enlist recruits.
Greenock was considered to be a fruitful destination in fulfilling these objectives as
there was optimism that the town would rise in revolt, plus that the rebel ‘Cause’ would
be joined there by a party of Covenanters, reputedly marching north from the Borders.
However, as the vessels (the ‘David’ and ‘Sophie’) hove-to offshore and presumably
anchored against tidal drift, being just short of the town (perhaps? where the present
cruise liner pontoon of Greenock Ocean Terminal is located but, anyway, in proximity,
then, to the Kirk of Greenock), a large party of presumed hostile horsemen was espied
moving in fast from the east (presumably on high enough ground for them to be seen
above the kirk graveyard wall) to intercept any landing. Speedy disembarkation was
therefore essential but, the depth of the (then undredged) water thereabouts, being less
than the draught of the ships, meant that reaching land must be by longboats of which
three in total were onboard, each capable of holding only twenty men. So, the reaction
was to attempt a stalling tactic in order to gain time, to stave-off immediate repulsion.
24
{The inshore shallowness of the Clyde, preventing the invading ships to make direct
landfall, also explains the present-day need for a pontoon at the cruise liner berth in
order to reach out to the natural deeper water channel, gouged by the river’s current.}
Accounts diverge in detail but the nub seems to be that horsemen initially positioned
themselves along the shoreline, just a musket-shot away from the ships whose canon-
fire, however, forced them to retire to be out of range, to a ridge (since interpreted as
‘Kilblain’ Brae, whose top would later become Kilblain Square, only to be, in 1789,
renamed yet again to its present George Square, in honour of King George III). This
was about 500 paces from and overlooking the shore (at that time a vista devoid of the
many intervening buildings which obscure the Clyde from the vantage point nowadays.)
The commander of the invasion force - Sir John Cochrane of Ochiltree (younger son
of the Earl of Dundonald), sent off two boatloads to shore under a Major John Fullerton.
Carter opines that the invaders were headed to the western side of the kirk graveyard,
this, thenabouts, situated very near to the river’s edge as previously noted (although that
distance would be increased, about a century and a half later, by land reclamation).
They landed under musket fire but got safely ashore and into a sort of ditch for shelter.
Meantime, the commander of the defending force, Lord William Cochrane (elder son
of the Earl of Dundonald) - who had raised this company of militia-cavalry for royal
service - consequently till he could ascertain exactly who the newcomers were, ordered
several of his men, officered by John Houston, younger (i.e. heir apparent) of Houston,
lieutenant of the troop, plus Thomas Crawfurd of Cartsburn or Crawfurdsburn (i.e. the
heritor), its quartermaster, to shadow the strangers when they landed. Houston and his
contingent seem to have surreptitiously retraced their steps a little to assume a position
nearer the shore (maybe in the vicinity of the present-day West Blackhall Street). Lord
William’s main force, remained pinned down on the ridge, just out of cannonball range.
John and William were thus brothers. This relationship may be deduced within pages
344-346 of ‘The Scots Peerage’, Volume 3, (1906), edited by Sir James Balfour Paul.
From hereon in, reference can be made to two witness accounts of the ‘battle’; namely:-
‘The History of the Sufferings of the Church of Scotland’, Volume 4 (1832), pages
292-3, by the Reverend Robert Wodrow, (first published, in original format in 1721)
wherein Wodrow includes a version of events related by “a worthy gentleman who
was present at this little scuffle”! So an eyewitness bystander, thus nonparticipant.
‘A selection of the Papers from the Earls of Marchmont’, Volume 3 (1831), which
relates “Sir Patrick Hume’s narrative of the Earle of Argyle’s expedition” on pages
47-8, Hume being in the invasion party, so an eyewitness but a partisan participant.
Unsurprisingly, the witness perceptions diverge in some vital respects. Anyway, Hume
takes up the train of events in his ‘narrative’ - unfortunately in rather disjointed phrases!
As an opening gambit, Hume had ordered the ship guns to fire, intent upon causing the
horsemen to retreat “up the hill” (as above-noted, Kilblain Brae), but, due to assessing it
as not practical to put enough men ashore to combat the opposition, he had, initially,
advised against a landing. But observing the disconcerted withdrawal of the horsemen
plus Major Fullarton going ashore anyway, he now reconsidered his own hesitance.
25
Conjectural overlay on a modern view of Greenock of the 1685 so-called ‘Battle of Greenock
“I had a great kindness for Mr. Fullarton, commanding. I, seeing this, [i.e. Fullarton’s
sortie ashore] sent a boat full, and went myself in a little pinnace with other six, all it
would hold. Fullarton’s boate only was landed when the pinnace came ashore. He
drew up twelve firelocks [i.e. a dozen men so armed with this type of gun] in a little
yard, seeing as many horsemen coming towards him. Houston of that Ilk [Houston of
Houston] younger, commanding the partie held up a handkerchief; whereupon Fullarton
with three went out to parly; but while parlying, Houston fired on him, then ran off, the
other [Fullarton] fired after him, and as some other of the horsemen came up to fire, the
other three with Fullarton fired and beat them off. By this time other two boates with
men landed, and wee came, and joining Fullarton, drew up the whole party together; but
our great gunes played over us, as I had ordered; [and the shots] came near the body of
horse [presumably still on Kilblain Brae] and made them reell; so they marched off over
the hill and left us. Then Sir John landed, and we went in the towne and took some
meal out of a girnell and a pretty barque out of the harbour, and returned to Rothesay.”
The version of the ‘worthy gentleman’, who was Robert Wodrow’s raconteur, interprets
the same sequence of events - as has been intimated previously - somewhat differently!
“When Major Fullartoun landed near the kirk of Greenock, John Houstoun younger of
that Ilk [‘of that Ilk’ is another method of saying ‘of Houston’] lieutenant of the troop,
and Thomas Crawfurd of Crawordsburn, eldest [he had a son of the same name],
quartermaster to it, with some gentlemen in company, rode down towards Mr.
Fullartoun and his men, who had put up a signal for parley; and Houstoun having
expostulated with the Major on their invasion, he answered - ‘They were come to their
native country for the preservation of the protestant religion, and liberties of their
country, and it was a pity such brave gentlemen should appear against them in the
service of a popish tyrant and usurper.’ Upon which Houstoun said he was a liar, and
discharged his pistols amongst them, as did also the rest of the gentlemen with him, and
the Major and his men returned their fire very briskly, but did no execution; only
Houstoun’s horse, being of mettle, and unused with the fire, threw him, but he was soon
remounted and returned to the troop. Upon their flight, Sir John with the rest came
ashore, and entered the town of Greenock, and endeavoured to prevail with the
inhabitants to join in defence of religion and liberty. He seized about forty bolls of
meal for the use of the army, and then, upon a false alarm, went off in the night…”
(The town thenabouts would be little more than the extent of today’s ‘Historic Quarter’:
i.e. Rue End and Cathcart Streets, perhaps.)
Which side, in this sallying and manoeuvring, initiated the parley and what exacerbated
the dialogue into mutual recrimination, loud enough for snatches to be overheard by the
‘worthy gentleman’? Actually, it doesn’t really matter. There is no quarrel more toxic
than that which divides close-family and friendships. Although dialogue had slipped
so soon to slanging, it probably had established - though this not recorded by either of
the two accounts - that the opponents were led by brothers. Anyway, maybe there was
hesitation by the negotiator-parties to proceed to bloodletting without seeking express
permission, each side from its own Cochrane leader. The loosing off of reciprocal
pistol shots, that “did no execution” at a range at which this would seem unlikely if
27
meant to hit, hints at this as mere posturing for effect between opponents who, although
irascible and peeved, did not want to hurt one another. However, if prudence had not
thus prevailed, the fray could easily have escalated into a fierce firefight in which the
kirk, its graveyard and Old Manse - sole protection in the area - would have inevitably
formed the main battleground, with volleys from snipers using gravestones as cover.
And, if the kirk had become a citadel for the defenders, it might have been raked by
cannon salvoes from the ships and thereby wrecked. Thankfully, confrontation had
remained - as Wodrow’s ‘worthy gentleman’ had disparaging scoffed - a “little scuffle”!
In fact, the entire rebellion would peter out ingloriously. Williamson states, on page 57
of ‘Old Cartsburn’, that “the Earl, being taken by Sir John Schaw Younger of Greenock,
at Inchinnan Water, was carried into the town of Renfrew, and when at some
refreshment there, he met Thomas Craufurd of Craufurdsburn, to whom he had a
peculiar regard, and to whom he gave a silver snuff box as a token of his respect:
‘Thomas, it has pleased Providence to frown on my attempt but, remember, I tell you,
ere long one shall take up this quarrel whose shoes I am not worthy to carry, who will
not miscarry in his undertaking.”. (He was referring to William, Prince of Orange, who
would indeed take away the kingship from the stem Stuart line in 1688.) Thus, despite
the Earl of Argyle/Argyll and Crawfurd of Cartsburn/Craufurdsburn finding themselves
on opposite sides in this conflict “They were old, and had been intimate friends” and,
probably, deeply regretted being divided in such matter.
The foregoing exemplifies how this arrantly arrogant despot, King Charles II, had not
only fomented civil war, plus internecine rupture among co-religionist, but had also
riven asunder “old friends” - and even siblings, such as the Cochranes - as above-noted.
Anyway, despite a narrow escape from envelopment and potential destruction, the wee
kirk had survived it all, unscathed.
The above present-day photo, taken from the pontoon in Greenock Ocean Terminal, shows
Right to Left, the waterfront cinema; the outlet of the culverted West Burn that separated the
old Feudal Baronies of Finnart and Greenock; the cruise reception building; the waterfront
leisure centre and the West College Campus. The viewpoint simulates from where the
crews of the ‘David’ and ‘Sofie’, at anchor offshore, would have viewed the militia horsemen
converging from the east over green fields then, now obscured by the buildings. Later, the
site would be filled by the shipbuilding yards, in sequence, of Scotts, Cairds, and Harland &
Wolff, this described in the ‘Seventh Phase’ of this narrative, beginning on page 46.
Photograph reproduced by courtesy of the photographer, Peter Sloan
28
Fourth Phase : West Kirk : 1685 - 1832 : further turmoil but also transformation
Although the exigencies of the politico-religious turmoil would continue long unabated,
it would not again intrude so close to home as it had in 1685. Thus, the heritors could
turn more of their attention to consider the long outstanding transformation of the kirk.
The original core was, by evolution not pre-ordination, transmuted into a cruciform
configuration by a transept blended into the nave, but the two stubby transept wrings,
however, not added contemporaneously.. One of the wings, so produced, was allocated
to Thomas Crawfurd, as ‘The Cartsburn Aisle’ (also called: loft, gallery or balcony).
The ‘Cartsburn Aisle’ balcony would become the ‘organ loft’ in 1874 when such a “kist
o whistles with the Devil in every pipe” was allowed by a relenting Church of Scotland.
The wing opposite was ‘The Schaw Aisle’, this entered at its rear from outside by a
handsome stone staircase. Thus the laird did not have to mingle with the holloi-polloi!
(When later historians described these new appurtenances, pews are indicated too, from
which may be deduced the existence now of a modicum of flooring plus seating for all.)
Nianian Hill, in ‘’The Story of the Old West Kirk’, on page 10, intimates how, toward
the end of the 17th century, adjacent to ‘The Schaw Aisle’, another two-floored
extension was abutted onto the outside kirk wall. Its lower chamber, which was
entered from the churchyard, was used as a mortuary, especially for cadavers recovered
from the adjacent River Clyde. The upper chamber, entered from inside of ‘The Schaw
Aisle’ itself, was a ‘retiring room’ for the laird and his family. (The photo shows these
additions as seen at the present-day but are much as they’d have looked also, of yore.)
29
The upper chamber - i.e. the laird’s ‘retiring room’ - was redeployed much later as the
vestry, but, at the time of being built, it doubled as the ‘Kirk Session House’ (a name
for the room where the kirks ruling body would hold its periodic meetings). Maybe the
fireplace, incorporated within the room, would have been welcome in the weeknight
deliberations of that august gtoup of a winter’s evening, but, if it were also used to
warm the laird’s family prior to their entering the frozen kirk on a Sunday morning, this
implies being pre-lit by a maidservant, confounding the noted Biblical prohibition of
work done on the Sabbath Day! However, this begs the question: would the clergyman
dare to remonstrate, on the point, with the heritor of his ministerial incumbency?
The erection of a gallery, presumably at the kirk’s expense - termed the Farmers’
Loft/Gallery’ - at the rear of the kirk nave - this, as Ninian Hill states in his book, on
page 31 - especially “for accommodation of the country folk from the landward portion
of the parish” (i.e. not only actual farmers but anyone from that area and station in life)
- prompted a petition in 1697 to the ‘Session’, by the “Masters of Ships and Seamen in
this parroch”, to insert a similar loft/gallery for their own kind and at their own expense.
This came to pass at the opposite extremity of the nave from the Farmers’ Loft/Gallery,
the year thereafter. Within its pew-seating, a hierarchal gradation applied: i.e.: the
front row “was covered with blue cloth fastened by brass nails and furnished with
cushions, for none under the rank of captain”; the second row had blue cloth but minus
the nails and cushions, being reserved for “mates”; whereas the remaining two rows -
for the able-seamen - were of bare pine! (It is oft averred that rank has its privileges; in
this case obviously entitling pampering of posteriors!) To recoup the financial outlay
from creating this ‘eyrie’, admission was restricted to specific people and, also, was
charged per visit by a ‘sentry’ at the foot. One entrusted such was a retired, ‘follically-
challenged’ seagoer, ‘Baldy Pin’, he “with a wooden leg and blind of an eye”! “When
any stranger who had no right to the gallery approached, Baldy kept his blind eye upon
him till he heard the sound of his offering drop into the ‘Sailors’ Box’ Then he brought
his other eye into action, and - seeing a stranger - promptly turned him back”! Apart
from such overlooked sharp-practice, “his duty was to classify all claimants to the seats
and to ward off female worshippers…”! So tells Ninian Hill, in his book, on page 33.
{“The ‘Sailors’ Box’ was [emblematic, during the period involved, of] a sort of
corporation possessed of considerable funds, which they lent out at interest.” So states
George Williamson in ‘Old Greenock, in a footnote on page 28. Presumably, the fund
might, additionally, have been used to succour indigent and/or injured local seamen.}
Formerly the stair leading the Sailors’ Loft was at the other side of the kirk from where
later placed. Ninian Hill, on page 32, states: “It was the only stair inside the church.”
Oh that the apocryphal tale that has been put about could be substantiated; namely that,
initially, no stairway was provided to reach the loft, so that the matelots must shin up a
rope from the floor below, being adept in this due to climbing in the sailing-ship
rigging! However, mariners of maturer years, not so spry as in their youth, would thus
be precluded from engaging in such ‘acrobatics’! As, potentially, might also senior
naval personnel, veterans in navigation but no longer so nimble through being out of
30
condition/practice; and conscious, in the need for decorum, not to regress to cavort in an
unseemly manner, hence a spectacle for amusement/sly derision by their subordinates!
Two further lofts within the kirk were eventually created but neither has survived.
“One of them extended from the Schaw Loft [Aisle] to the Farmers’ Loft, and contained
only three pews.” So states Ninian Hill on page 16. Nevertheless, such an overhang
as that must surely have required support by pillars from the main floor beneath.
1767 saw - as Williamson in ‘Old Greenock’ on page 26, states - “The walls to be
raised three and a half foot higher” and, presumably by replacement of the barrel-
vaulting , the “the whole of the rooff… covered with Isdale sclates” (i.e. from Easdale,
an islet 16 miles south of Oban which once had seven slate quarries - all now defunct).
the piston, a loss which, up until then, had consequently diminished the overall thermal
efficiency hence mechanical efficacy. His improvement would subsequently enable the
same power to be generated by an engine which had a much reduced bulk and weight,
thus rendering practical its incorporation into traction vehicles on land and ships at sea.
{Until that time engines had been stationary only but, henceforth, they could be mobile!
Watt’s simple but genius idea was the 18th century’s equivalent, in sense of progress, to
the 1967 first moon landing: “One small step for a man: one giant leap for mankind”,
insofar that it would, in effect, kick-start the industrial revolution! Watt must have
experienced great excitement at his brilliant brainwave, but, nevertheless, forbore to
commit it, either to paper or experiment, till the Monday morning. This says much for
his deference to the religious doctrinal mores instilled during his youth. Unfortunately,
as will be seen, further in this story, his morality would be sullied in another context.}
Despite all of the above-noted means to expand the wee kirk’s capacity, erection of a
second place of Presbyterian worship had become an absolute necessity. Thereby, a
congregation formed in 1741, after conducting its services in ad hoc accommodation,
obtained a permanent home in 1761, in Greenock’s ‘Mid Kirk’ (since 1966, ‘Wellpark
Mid-Kirk’) this built on ground donated by the then Lord Cathcart in Cathcart Square,
which the latter owned.(thus the name). So intimates Robert Murray Smith, in ‘The
History of Greenock’, on page 254. “After the opening… the two churches were
referred to as the ‘New Parish’ and the ‘Old Parish’”. So states, Jess S. Bolton, in ‘The
Old West Kirk’, on page vi. However, in due course, Johnne Schaw’s kirk would be
known, and differentiated by its directional location, in the town, as the ‘West Kirk’.
Addition of the ‘New Parish/Mid Kirk’, still however, proved insufficient to keep pace
with the swelling populace of Greenock. This was the age wherein began transatlantic
commerce. However, Greenock’s late 17th - late 19th century industry (operated in the
financial interest of a societal elite where any benefit to the ordinary people was a by-
product, not the intention) was orientated to service the African-Negro slave-driven
economy of the West Indies plantations, producing sugar, transported over the Atlantic
to be refined in Greenock. Greenock’s elite owned both the refineries and shares in the
plantations themselves. There were likewise cotton and tobacco imports to Greenock
from the also Negro-slave-worked plantations of the southern United States of America.
The Book of Genesis, Chapter 9, Verses 18-27, relates of Noah (saved by God in the
great flood which devastated the earth and whose three sons were designated by God to
repopulate the continents) that, when one of them, ‘Ham’ (Hebrew for black, signifying
swarthy skinned) inadvertently offended Noah, the latter cursed Ham’s progeny to be
servants to their (white-skinned) brethren. This Biblical text was conflated, by the 18th
- 19th centuries European upper echelon, to contrive, in general, a racial stereotyping of
non-whites as inferior, and, in this particular regard, justification for the oppression of
black people, victims of the slave trade, a practice condoned then - and thus accorded a
veneer of respectability - by most major religious denominations, enabling this elite to
proclaim and partake in Christian adherence, apparently absolved and conscience-free!
And this was no less evident in the then Church of Scotland - its ‘West Kirk’ included -
still incongruously operating a system to condemn folk, often for trivia, to be hunched,
humbled on a stool of contrition in social disgrace, while hypocrites to Christianity sat
in their kirk’s pew stalls - smug in societal praise, at least among their own peers - for
their entrepreneurship in ‘trade’: however, trade that was entrenched in human misery!
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And, among offenders was James Watt’s immediate family. The father and brother of
James were mired in actual slave-trafficking which, on one occasion in 1762, James too
was - if reluctantly - inveigled into complicity due to fulfilling a family commitment.
To be fair, but only mitigating, rather than outright exonerating him of the tainture, it is
noted that James did, in a statement of 1791, censure the abomination by the somewhat
pious and hazy hope that: “…we heartily pray that the system of slavery, so disgraceful
to humanity, were abolished by prudent though progressive measures.” Ay, sometime!
Unquestionably he was a technological revolutionary - but nowise a sociological one!
{Burns subsequently jettisoned any thought of going to the West Indies and was to
redeem his humanitarian credentials through his paean-anthem of social
egalitarianism, based upon intrinsic worthiness and ethics, not inherited rank: ‘A
Man’s a Man for a’ that!’(1795). Its famous lines, extoll the common bond of all
humanity: “ Then, let us pray that come it may, as come it will for a’ that; that man tae
man, the world o’er shall brithers be for a’ that!” Also, although probably not the
actual author of the lyric of ‘A Slave’s Lament’ - which captures the heart-rending
anguish of an enslaved person from Senegal - he saved the poem and its melody from
oblivion by including it in his collection published with posterity in mind, of the Scottish
folksongs in danger of being forgotten thenabouts.}
Despite the turmoils of the foregoing age, significant improvements had been made in
the West Kirk by its two heritors, despite their pre-occupation with the era’spolitics.
Nevertheless, due to neglect in some other aspects, destitution had also taken its toll.
Just as the recent past had experienced allegorical wear and tear in the ‘fabric’ of
Scotland and her National Kirk, so there had also been physical wear in tear in the
actual fabric of Greenock’s original kirk, and this would have devastating ramifications.
In due course, when the importance of ‘Highland Mary’ being buried in Greenock had
been recognised in the story of Robert Burns’ life, in 1842, a memorial stone was added
to her resting place in the Old West Kirk graveyard. Contemporary press reportage
indicated that “this stone has been erected by the contributions of many admirers of
Scotia’s Bard in memory of his early love Mary Campbell or Highland Mary.”
These financial contributors would almost certainly be from Greenock’s upper echelon
who, despite effusion of romantic pathos, nevertheless, could simultaneously disregard
how Mary had died from a pestilence caused by lack of a pure water supply for all!
The pictures below show, respectively, the stone in its former and present locations
See also page 49 for the removal of Mary’s mortal remain to a new resting place Greenock
Municipal Cemetery, in 1920, to which site the memorial stone was, thereafter, transplanted.
34
Fifth Phase : West Kirk : 1632 - 1863 : decrepitude, desertion, and disruption
In 1832, there enters into the ‘West Kirk’ story the Reverend Patrick McFarlan, Doctor
of Divinity, a charismatic, sometimes controversial and, certainly, kenspeckle figure.
By now the ‘male only’ benches of the Old West Kirk’s early days, had been, as Ninian
Hill, informs (yet reproaches) in ‘The Story of the Old West Kirk’, page12, “replaced
by the narrow, uncomfortable pews”. Whereas, nowadays the nether-region numbing
is somewhat cushioned by padded strips laid along the length of each pew, but then
there was no such concession. Frugality not ‘falderals’ and, thus, fraught discomfort
was deliberate lest parishioners might envisage that they attended kirk for luxurious
pleasure! And on page 14, Hill goes on to reveal how “the flooring under the pews was
little better than open sparring leaving the earth below quite visible.” “The church got
into a very damp and insanitary condition. In summer the doors were all kept open
regardless of draughts, otherwise the atmosphere would have been unbearable.”
Despite the forthright foregoing derogation by Dr. McFarlan, according to the Rev.
Scoular: “It took the Presbytery two years before it condemned the building.”
Moreover, not till 1839 did Presbytery approve plans for a new replacement church.
This spacious replacement was of the non-fancy oblong shape favoured for Presbyterian
churches then. The Rev. Scoular describes it on page 6 as: “a square squat building,
standing in a quiet wooded thoroughfare”. Indeed, such was Nelson Street (named
after Admiral Lord Nelson) theneabouts at its junction with Brisbane Street. To it, in
1841, the congregation of the old kirk moved, abandoning the latter to fall into parlous
ruin. They took with them anything moveable, including the ‘Tam o lang’ bell which
would only again resound in service after being housed in a fine, tall steeple, eventually
added to the new church in 1855. (It remains there today, although totally silent now.)
Also, among things transferred to the new-build, was the church’s name. From its
outset, it would expropriate the designation ‘West Kirk’, whereby its old predecessor
would, henceforth, bear the name that it has, ever since, retained: the ‘Old West Kirk’.
And what of the manse? It is necessary to dip back into previous history. George
Williamson, in his ‘Old Greenock’, on pages 31-2, makes various statements relative to
his own standpoint at the 1888 date of his book’s publication. These are, namely:-
“there is no doubt whatever that the old manse… now standing is on the original
site.”
“No doubt… the manse was a very primitive building, and like all the others, within
the bounds, would have a thatch or heather roof.”
35
“The date 1625, cut upon a gable, indicates its antiquity, but not the date of
erection.” (The italics are Williamson’s)
“In 1699…it was reported that the manse ‘was not sufficient,’ as it ‘wanted a cellar,
was abused with underwater, the office-houses, namely, the barn, brew-house, and
stable want riggin, storm boards are wanting for the windows, and lyning for the
window tops, and yet the family is much incommoded by reason of smoak.”
“The complaints of the manse culminated at length in an arrangement… whereby it
should be conveyed to Mr. Shaw Stewart (afterwards Sir John Shaw Stewart) ‘in
excambation [i.e. substitution by equivalent] for a new manse, offices and garden, to
be built more commodious, and on such a situation as should appear most
commodious, the heritors to be at the sole expense…” The two heritors of the
parish, at that time, would be Sir Michael Stewart 3rd Baronet, (i.e. Mr. John
Stewart’s father), and Thomas Crawfurd 4th Laird of Cartsburn or Craufurdsburn.
“The new feu [i.e. site] was situated at the west end of Clarence Street… and has
now been absorbed by the buildings of the Glebe Sugar Refinery.” (This is still
extant in the 21st century, although, for decades, in a dilapidated, unoccupied state).
“Mr. Shaw Stewart,
having thus obtained
possession of the Old
Manse, sold it by
public roup…” This
was in 1787 after
which, accordingly, it
ceases to be in the
kirk’s ambit.
In conjunction with the 1707 Act of Union of the Scottish and English Parliaments to
form that of Great Britain, another act was passed, guaranteeing that the Church of
Scotland would remain the ‘Established Church’ of Scotland. However, in 1711, the
Parliament passed the ‘Patronage Act’ which expropriated to the heritor landowners of
Scotland the exclusive right to choose ministers for the Established Church within their
landholdings, this synchronising it with the system prevalent in England but anathema
to the Church of Scotland. As has been noted, when that church had been Presbyterian
as opposed to Episcopalian, the choice of minister had been the democratic prerogative
of each individual church membership plus the Presbytery. Now, however, by being an
‘Established Church’ within the British ‘Union’, this tied it to the British State with
subservience to the British Parliament’s diktat, and thus its English members’ majority!
‘Established’ status had not protected but, ironically, had cost the Kirk its autonomy.
Such foreignly imposed legislation, now caused long, rankling controversy within the
Church of Scotland which ultimately culminated in a schism termed the ‘Disruption’.
Thus in 1843, 450 ‘resenting’ ministers out of 1,200 seceded from the Church of
Scotland - including a dozen of Greenock’s then sixteen, with the Reverend McFarlan a
seceder. Most of the ‘flocks’ from their kirks followed their respective clergymen to
compositely constitute the ‘Free Church of Scotland’, enshrining the previous right of
each congregation to select its minister, subject to no State or other interference. In
this principled venture, they forfeited everything but thrived through indomitable zeal to
expeditiously construct their own alternative churches plus manses, and even schools.
By the 1860s, the Old West Kirk languished woebegone - and therefore crumbling.
The Nelson Street church, during many years of existence, has had other names during
subsequent decades (e.g. St. Luke’s).
By the ‘Church Patronage (Scotland) Act 1874’ (163 years after the above-noted 1711
Act) patronage was abolished, thus reverting to each Church of Scotland congregation -
along with Presbytery approbation - the right of choosing its minister. In the decades
following formation of the Free Church, there had been rifts within it, resulting in
splinter-denominations formed. In 1929, a majority of ‘United Free Church’ members
re-entered the Church of Scotland, although a body, continuing under the name, ‘United
Free Church’, exits to this day. So, the deep wounds, inflicted due to the meddling in
Scottish affairs, of a Parliament located outside of Scotland, weren’t altogether healed.
To summarise the respective claims: The ‘Old West Kirkers’ possessed much of the
original Greenock kirk fabric, whereas the ‘Westburners’ included some desendents of
its membership in an unbroken succession. However, what both of the congregations
ought factually to be most proud of is a joint and equal heritage from the original kirk.
As hinted by the foregoing statement, the Old West Kirk would, ultimately survive
to embrace a new future, despite that, in 1841, its fate looked ominously uncertain.
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Sixth Phase : Old West Kirk (‘North Parish’) : 1863 - 1917: renovation & rebirth
Greenock’s perennial population explosion of yore being relentless, the 1860s saw local
Church of Scotland seating again outpaced. To address this, a “momentous meeting
was held in Greenock’s Council Hall on Friday, April 17th, 1863: Business: ‘the
Restoration of the Old West Kirk’” The previously mentioned “Provost Grieve, as
Chairman… said that he had recently been one of a deputation to Sir Michael Robert
Shaw Stewart to ask his consent to the proposed restoration… and went on the say that
Sir Michael had agreed, provided he was relieved of any responsibility in connection
with its future repair.” So relates Jess S. Bolton, in “The Old West Kirk’, on page 21.
{Putting this in family context: in 1752, the male direct descent of the Schaws of
Greenock had expired, with the heiress to the lands having married into the Stewart of
Ardgowan family. From thence derived the ‘Shaw Stewart’ hybrid surname eventually
adopted by the ongoing lineage which would add the Schaw-owned estates to the
Ardgowan ones. In the context of the ‘Shaw’ Greenock aspect, the Shaw Stewart of the
time would thereupon become both Laird of Greenock (plus its ancillary estates such as
Finnart) and also a heritor of the Old West Kirk. (It was theoretically still the parish
church of Greenock Parish although there were other Presbyterian churches.)}
{In 1747, as a direct consequence of the 1745-6 Jacobite Rising to restore the original
stem-line Stuart monarchs (exiled on the Continent) to the Throne of Great Britain and
Ireland - and the British Government’s recognition that the near success of that Rising
had been greatly assisted by lairds’ ability to legally call out their feudal vassals for
military service, even against the ‘State’, led to Parliament abolishing feudal baronies.
Thereafter, although the cognate title for a ‘feudal baron’, i.e. ‘laird’, lingered as a
heraldic courtesy, it was henceforth shorn of any jurisdictive power (this retracted
exclusively to the ‘Crown’). Lairdship was diminished to signify purely a landowner.
The political curtailment of authority, however, had no effect upon ‘heritor’ prerogative
relative to the Established Church of Scotland. (And, for that matter, lairds, especially,
connected to clans, continued, for a long time, to enjoy a societally prestigious status.)}
Anyway, to revert; the aforenoted Sir Michael Robert Shaw Stewart - although, by the
Patronage Act, potentially all-powerful in the affairs of this old Greenock Presbyterian
kirk as a ‘heritor of the parish’ - he was now effectively relinquishing that control. Jess
S. Bolton, explains in ‘The Old West Kirk’, on page 23, that: “he had built his own
39
Episcopal Chapel in 1856 at Ardgowan and had his family burying place at Inverkip.”
I.e., he (as indeed his Stewart family before him and the Shaw Stewart family ongoing)
was not of the same religious denomination as the church over which held dominion.
However, it is to his credit that he had the common-sense courtesy to conciliate in the
circumstances with those of the Presbyterian denomination who could administrate it.
Restoration of the Old West Kirk was approved by its backers as it being “well placed”,
as noted by Jess. S. Bolton’s book on page 32, “where working men and their families
could be accommodated … within their reach.” There were also many incoming
‘migrant’ workers to this workaday area of the town which would make the kirk handy.
During necessary refurbishment, as Ninian Hill states, in the ‘Story of the Old West
Kirk’, on pages10-11:“The walls
were in many places rebuilt in 1864,
and faced with polished ashlar in the
most approved fashion of the time.
The gables were heightened and the
north window was enlarged. The
tower was built at the same time.”
It even got a steeple of sorts. Also,
on page, 14, Hill states: “When the
old floor was removed in 1864, the
basement was dug out and relaid
with asphalt. The level of the floor
was lowered six inches”.
Williamson, in ‘Old Greenock’ on page 42, states how “ The church was planted as near
as might be in the centre of the originally gifted ground” [i.e. the graveyard]…but
“extensions which took place from time to time left a larger space on the west than on
any of the other sides. Originally the enclosure was a turf or earthen dyke [wall] “but
as it broke down… cattle were allowed to enter,” (attracted by the nutritious grass
fertilised by the humus of the burials?) “There were two entrances to the churchyard,
40
the principal being at the south-east corner where Nicolson and Ropework Streets
meet.”… “This was also the gate by which funerals entered.”… “The other entrance…
had an arch over it, with the date 1675 on the top.”
The kirk building had assumed much of the external appearance that it has today. It
was opened anew for worship - its structure regenerated its spirit replete - on Sunday,
December 25th, 1864, this, Christmas Day but, thenabouts not the Presbyterian festival-
date then that it has become now in Scotland, in harmony with the rest of Christendom.
Due to the formation of other churches in the area, from 1872 (so advises Jess S.
Bolton, in ‘The Old West Kirk’, on page vi) it became officially designated as the
‘North Parish’ Church, although - she asserts - “it was still familiarly called the ‘Old
West Kirk.’” (In order not to confuse the situation by changing the name to another
used at the time, in this narrative the ‘Old West Kirk’ name will continue to be used.)
As has already been noted, an organ was installed in the kirk in 1874 (just a decade
after the kirk was recommissioned) thereupon to be in tune - literally - with what was
occurring quite generally in many Church of Scotland kirks. This did away with the
‘precentor’ whose desk had been previously positioned just below the pulpit in the Old
West Kirk - a common such location. Ninian Hill, in ‘The Story of the Old West Kirk’,
on page 69, states: “In the case of the Old West Kirk, it [i.e. precenting] was only
abolished in 1832, when Dr. M’Farlan was inducted”. It would be interesting to learn
what regulated the music in the interim between 1832 and advent of the organ in 1874.
of these songs of praise to God. In fact, affording enjoyment; an aspect which had
been almost previously disapproved of as somehow averse to the gravitas of religion!
Actually, ‘precented’ psalms - properly sung - can be very evocative and beautiful!
(Hymns also became introduced in the Church of Scotland and Free Kirks in the 1870s.)
The focal position of the pulpit (located more-or-less where the Crawfurd Aisle meets
the nave of the kirk) rendered it visible from every seat in the kirk - but, conversely,
every seat in the kirk could be scrutinised by the minister when he was in the pulpit: a
potential which might deter attendees surreptitiously snoozing during tedious sermons!
Anyway, the ‘Scottish Enlightenment’ - short on ‘humanities’ during its timespan - had,
notwithstanding, maybe ushered in an age when the Church of Scotland would soften
its hardline attitudes in some respects without surrendering its Christian principles.
For instance, whereas, during the Old West Kirk’s early life it had been totally
unglazed, with then having had plain leaded-glass panels introduced into its apertures
(perhaps only sparsely, initially ) now, by contrast, following the 1864 fabric upgrade,
the 17th century witnessed a most dramatic rectification of this former omission.
Jess S. Bolton, in ‘The Old West Kirk’, on page 42, tells how the librarian of Greenock
between 1868 and 1894, Allan Park Paton, who was also a “well-known patron of the
Arts, was instrumental in placing commissions for four stained glass windows with the
prestigious firm of William Morris” and “designed by associates of Morris, the Pre-
Raphaelite artists, Edward Burne-Jones and Dante Gabriel Rossetti, as well as a fifth by
the elder Cottier… five windows… among some of the finest examples of modern
stained glass and have attracted attention from many parts of the world.” For instance:-
{And what of the name that gave this genre its identity? Raffaello Sanzio - Raphael,
1483-1520 - an eminent painter of his time, chose to emulate the classical, posed and
stylised art that was the cultural hallmark of Rome and Greece. Later artists, however,
considered this to be staged and staid, so preferred the more realistic, naturalistic,
freer, vibrant technique of the Renaissance era which had preceded Raphael. In
reverting to this type of artistic expression, they used ‘Raphael’ as a watershed ‘label’.}
These first windows began a collection of 16 ‘illuminated’ panes in the church, such
that, “when the sun shines, glorious colours blaze from every gallery and niche, turning
the interior into a living rainbow of light.” Thus extols Jess Bolton, on her page 42.
The Old West Kirk’s interior was now an eclectic melding of traditional with the ‘avant
garde’ in contemporary European culture, this reflected probably in its furnishings also.
former usage for the item which is, in fact, just a bench of normal adult sitting height,
this attribution of previous purpose (for which Williamson gives no source, regrettably)
has been repeated, uncritically, in relevant Greenock history books, plus all of the
guidebooks, etc., produced for informing visitors to the Old West Kirk, ever since.
Compounding this misidentification, Ninian Hill, in ‘The Story of The Old West Kirk’
of 1911, captions a photo in the book of the item as THE ‘CUTTY’ STOOL, obviously
unaware that this meaning of ‘cutty’ in his label of the item even contradicts the design!
Nowadays, the bench still resides in the Old West Kirk, placed, not where found by
Williamson, i.e. the Session House (which would later become the vestry) but
repositioned just below the pulpit, where indeed would, indeed, have been’ located of
yore’ any actual ‘stool of repentance’. And, as such it is represented to present-day
visitors, many of whom who will have a photograph taken of themselves, sitting on it in
feigned token of misdemeanour! In fact it is a favourite tourist attraction in the context!
Nevertheless, this item of furniture - so admired by Williamson with its ornate baluster-
turned legs, trestle feet and exquisitely rebated top (the latter albeit protruding further
out from the legs at one end than the other, giving an asymmetrical, less than finesse,
appearance) - would be considered, by kirk purists of yore, as an entirely inappropriate
kind of seating to be wasted on ‘wastrels’ where plain austerity would be more apposite.
(Actually, it must be conceded, despite such decoration being unusual in a Church of
Scotland ‘stool of repentance’, nevertheless, it is not unique, though seldom met with.)
As previously noted however, ‘stools of repentance’ were never of normal adult seating
height. They were always either lower or higher, and always a single seat. To have, in
a church, only one ‘stool of repentance’, albeit, with 3 possible seating places, poses the
problem, of how to accommodate 4 or more offenders on a ‘multi-penitent’ Sabbath!
And, a greater problem could occur when having two occupiers guilty of promiscuity ,
this being a reprehensibility castigated by old-time Presbyterian dogma with a penalty
of 3 consecutive Sundays on the ‘stool’ prescribed for any fornication whatever, and 6
if it involved adultery! With the culpable couple seated side-by-side, and unless
closely and continually superviised to ensure that they kept suitably apart, there was
always a risk of them improperly touching (i.e. huddling or, even worse, cuddling!) the
very impropriety for which they had been placed upon the ‘stool’ for public chastening!
In 1841, during the clearance upon deserting the Old West Kirk, it must be presumed
that the Reverend McFarlan plus congregation took, therefrom, everything portable of
value with them to the new West Kirk (Westburn) in Nelson Street. And, furthermore,
that during the 1843 ‘Disruption’, when he and most of his flock seceded from the
Church of Scotland, that they took nothing. (The seceders stressed that they took out
of their churches only themselves and absolutely no artefacts. Accordingly, had the
above-noted piece of furniture been possessed in 1841 (i.e. had it belonged to the Old
West Kirk and been taken to the New West Kirk then) it would nowadays repose in the
Westburn Church (unless it had been disposed of from there since 1843). However, the
fact that it is actually found in the Old West Kirk now, signifies that it was only
acquired by that kirk at the time when it was re-opened in 1864 or in the interval since.
{Among items left behind in the Westburn Church by the seceders was the ‘Tam o lang’
bell (not in use there at the time of the ;Disruption’ as the steeple in which it would
44
eventually be mounted wasn’t built till 1855); also four Communion chalices whereat
the Latin inscription around the mouth of each vessel reads ‘The eucharistic goblet of
the Church of Greenock, purchased at the expense of the Kirk Session. 1708’.}
So, prevention of infanticide was the imperative: commutation for cash the incentive.
Unfortunately, it would take more than the foregoing to remove the stigma from child-
bearing mothers outwith wedlock, plus the unconscionable, unchristian prejudice meted
out to their now illegitimate children who were, of course, innocent of any wrongdoing.
The painting under-noted, ‘The Black Stool or Presbyterian Penance’, 1795, by David Allan,
poignantly illustrates the
typical kirk convened
‘court’ scene in the case of
an extramarital sexual
affair (fornication) where
the distraught mother of the
resultant illegitimate child
that she holds in her arms,
sits weeping on the ‘stool
of repentance’, possibly a
4-legged ‘cutty stool’, with
her mother, sitting on a seat
of normal height (certainly
higher) as she glares
upward towards the
crestfallen and contrite
father of the child, who, on high in the ‘dock’ is being lambasted by the minister. And,
whereas there is some congregational curiosity at to what would probably be a frequent
‘performance’ in the kirk, there looks to be little sympathy, for either of the ‘accused’
pair, being exhibited by any the onlookers. But as the result of that public humiliation,
the lassie, plus her child, would have their lives - potentially - permanently execrated.
Undoubtedly there must have been, originally, a ‘stool of repentance’ in the Old West
Kirk. But it was unlikely to have been the type on ‘stilts’ and probably of the ‘utility’
type (i.e. ether a cutty or a creepie stool) this dispensed with when its barbaric use
gradually lapsed, as above-noted. Was it (or they, if there were several) left behind to
rot of damp when the Old West Kirk was evacuated in 1841, and any remains thrown
out when that kirk re-opened in 1864? A progressive urban kirk (such as the Old West
Kirk had become by then) was not about to regress by bucking the trend to restore an
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instrument of mental cruelty already being phased out in all but a few outlandish kirks,
and totally gone in all by 1884. George Williamson, a historian of mature years when
he wrote his book, had obviously never witnessed, in actual use, a ‘stool of repentance’,
which rather substantiates its obsolescence even during the earliest years of his life.
Anyway, the item now present in the Old West Kirk just isn’t a ‘stool of repentance’:
nor is it even a stool. It is a bench. Nevertheless, it isn’t likely, either, that this item of
fancy furniture represents some cut-down remnant, reconditioned from the ‘men-only’
benches which once flanked the interior of the early kirk. It is likely that where
Williamson noted it to be (i.e. the ‘Session House’, which, in time would become the
vestry) is where it had always reposed. When that room was the venue for the Session
meetings, its members might have sat upon it to toast their toes at the roaring fire in that
room’s fireplace. As, also likewise might the minister, before venturing into a chilly
pulpit, hopefully no longer having to worry that he was contravening the ‘no work on
the Sabbath’ prohibition, insofar that someone performed work to set and light the fire.
And what about the Kirk Session’s earlier tendency to autocracy? Had it too mellowed
from former extremism! Robert Burns was no stranger to the Kirk Session’s ‘(s)tool of
repentance’ - and many, even of his avid admirers, might opine that he deserved this
‘comeuppance’ on many an occasion for his misdeeds! Nevertheless, maybe he also
deserves acclamation for achieving the equivalent of yon mischievous urchins who rang
the kirk bell as a pinprick to the Kirk Session’s petty presumption and pretentiousness.
In a biting satirical poem (composed circa 1785) and entitled ‘Holy Willie’s Prayer’,
Burns imagines its eponym engaged in his religious devotions. Willie - (based on a
real person; an elder and member of his Kirk Session of Mauchline Church, Ayrshire) -
represents himself to God, respectively as…
“a pillar o’ Thy temple - an “example to all Thy flock”
“Thy chosen in this place” - and “God’s ain Priest”
He excuses his serial womanising as due to intoxication, but a failing deliberately
foisted onto him by God to prevent him from becoming “owre proud”! He castigates -
for disobeying the Sabbath rule - those “Wha bring Thy elders to disgrace”, and whom
he asks God to curse for setting “the warld in a roar o laughin at us”. And, in fact, the
world - in particular Scotland - was evoked to mocking laughter by the popularity of
Burns’ bardic barbs in this matter, this undoubtedly a contributory factor to Kirk
Sessions and the ‘elders’ thereof subsequently redefining, for the better, their image and
their conduct during the late 18th and through (as noted) the 19th century. (Plus, of
course, the poem has led to the lexicographical definition of a ‘Holy Willie’ as a
sanctimonious hypocrite, duplicitous in religion.)
By this phase of its ‘life’ the Old West Kirk was enjoying a ‘renaissance’ as a forward-
looking modern kirk, albeit its innovations couched in the ‘garb’ of an ancient edifice.
So, despite all of its vicissitudes, the Old West Kirk had burgeoned yet again to
serve the faith’ faithfully in the community of Greenock, as it had done in the past.
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Seventh Phase : Old West Kirk (‘North Parish’) : 1917 - 1928: transplantation
As it happens, the next phase in the Old West Kirk’s story - just like other episodes
before, and noted previously - derives from factors originating outside of Scotland.
In the early 20th century, for politico-economic reasons, the shipbuilding and marine
engineering giant, Harland & Wolff, Limited - long established in Belfast - determined
to plant a major base for its operations outside of Ireland and within the ‘Great Britain’
mainland. (A hypothesis for the company’s reason for doing this thenabouts, is offered
in the book, ‘Finding Forgotten Finnart’, (2021), by Andrew Pearson, on pages 205-7),
As the initial step, in 1911-12 the company bought and conglomerated three minor
shipyards to create a substantial whole at the town of Govan, further up the River Clyde
from Greenock Next, due to unfolding events in Ireland in early 1916, the company set
its sights upon initiating a yet even larger ‘footfall’ within the same general region.
However, all suitable river/estuarial sites were already occupied, in one way or another.
But replicating the precedent above-noted to achieve the sizeable area desired, might,
however, obtain the desired result: i.e. acquiring - in order to conjoin - several smaller
contiguous units. And Greenock was chosen in which to attempt such a concoction.
Consequently, in late 1916, H&W bought, though retaining its name - Cairds Shipyard.
The Caird family had held the foregoing yard since 1871, having - over a period -
bought it incrementally from the Scott family which had begun, in 1711, constructing
herring busses (fishing boats) in a yard situated at the mouth of the West Burn plus a
little eastwards towards, but not encroaching upon, Greenock’s ‘West Harbour’.
By the 1840s, the Scott family had extended the yard westwards, along the verge that
lay between Old West Kirk graveyard and River Clyde shore, plus also reclaiming land
from the river to create an area that increased the distance of the churchyard from the
water’s edge (originally, ca. 10 yards/ 9.1 metres, at its narrowest point) about fivefold.
This may be seen by comparing equivalent extracts from the 1825 ‘Plan of the Town of
Greenock, by John Wood, with the Ordinance Survey map, ‘11.5 Greenock’, of 1857.
The kirk now had a shipyard flanking northwest to the kirk’s rear, in addition to its
47
south-eastern side.
Consequently, it
was apparently not
at all unusual to see
the protruding, bow
of a ship whish was
being built on the
stocks, and this-
overshadowing the
eastern side of the
old kirk as depicted
in a contemporary
etching by the local
Greenock artist,
Tom Maxwell.
A visitor, viewing the kirk on a shipyard working day in the 1870s, diaried that the din
of construction was “deafening”. Presumably, too, intrusion of dust and grime into the
kirk’s interior would be considerable. Undoubted continuance, then, of Sabbatarianism
would restrict shipyard working to Monday to Saturday inclusive, allowing Sunday
abstinence to enable noise-free worship. Co-existence of a sort would prevail but there
might be kirk incentive to accept any viable option to improve worshipping conditions.
The original humpbacked bridge over the West Burn, affording access from the village
of Greenock to the kirk, had been removed through encroachment on its site by the
shipbuilding yard and replaced by a crossing further up the burn as part of the
embryonic Dalrymple Street in a, by now, town, with a quite extensive crisscross of
roads to serve the housing which had long spread out from the initial village site at Rue
End. This crossover of the burn, rather than a bridge, can more likely be considered as
the first step in a gradual process of culverting the lower reaches of the waterway, as its
course became subducted beneath urban sprawl. The burn’s estuary had, by now, been
channelled (‘canalised’) and straddled by the shipyard, now on both of its busy banks.
H&W’s strategy, however, of course didn’t stop at acquiring Cairds. The intention was
a shipyard employing ten thousand men, this necessitating a further block of foreshore
land extending from the eastern extremity of Cairds yard to the Greenock Custom
House. And to complete the plan needed the incorporation of the Old West Kirk
graveyard, to the south. Due to various insurmountable obstacles, the yard in prospect
would, over its length, be curtailed in the distance that it could incorporate inland from
the shoreline. Only at its western extremity, by aggregating the strip of the Cairds yard
that lay between the shore and the Old West Kirk graveyard to the graveyard itself
would an extent of slipway be achievable whereon to construct ships of the length of the
ill-fated, H&W Belfast-built, ‘S.S. Titanic’. Thus, even if it entailed an inflated cost,
48
H&W’s procurement of the graveyard was crucial to the viability of the entire project.
Below is an extract from the contemporaneous ‘Plan to Accompany (Postal) Directory’, showing the
locations of the kirk, ‘before’ and that proposed ‘after’ the transfer
With the State’s permission - due to success of the public enquiry - secured, H&W then
unilaterally and cavalierly (and for which there seems no explanation) sought to renege
upon the site to whence the company intended to transfer the kirk, this affront creating a
hiatus lasting till 1924 when the original Esplanade site, thus the ‘deal’, was re-instated.
49
In the process of incrementally disassembling the kirk, space adjacent would be needed
to accommodate the dismantled components prior to their transportation, in batches, to
the new site. Such space could be obtained by clearance of the adjacent graveyard. In
anticipation that the solution above-noted would eventually be found to the impasse
regarding the where replacement site would be, the delicate, hence time-consuming
exhumation of those in the graveyard got underway. Descendants of those buried
therein were offered alternatives regarding the place of their forebears’ re-interment.
Whereas most opted for Greenock’s Municipal Cemetery in a communal grave there, or
for Inverkip Street Cemetery, many chose reburial in the grounds of the new Seafield
site itslf. Hence, each of the gravestones now contained within that precinct should
have buried there the mortal remains of those denoted on the stone. (See Appendix 1 :
Remains exhumed from old kirkyard & re-interred in Seafield site. In the appendix too
is Scottish Parliamentary documentation defining the legal protection of internments.)
Other exceptions to communal reburial were James Watt’s antecedents and ‘Highland
Mary’, each given, within the Municipal Cemetery, separate and specially marked lairs,
since visited as ‘shrines’ by exponents of James Watt and Robert Burns. On 13th
November 1920, a casket containing ‘Highland Mary’s remains was borne reverently,
on foot, by members of ‘Greenock Burns (Mother) Club’ (i.e. the first in the world to so
honour the national bard) to the lassie’s new final resting place. (See picture on page
33.) The Watts were transferred thither, to lie close by ‘Mary’, on 26th April,1927.
Jess S. Bolton, in ‘The Old West Kirk, on page 28, notes further concessions. H&W,
in addition to buying the Esplanade ground to which the kirk would be relocated,
intimated preparedness to pay for a new and better church tower, also “extra windows,
and promised that the existing illuminated windows, mural tablets etc., would be
carefully preserved and transferred to the new site: also, the internal woodwork…”.
Moreover, a parochial hall - to be named after the H&W chairman, Lord Pirrie - would
be donated to the congregation, thereby enabling church services to be held throughout
the entire period from when the kirk began to be dismantled to when it would be re-
opened on its Esplanade site.
The elegant Pirrie Hall occupied a similar location, relative to the rebuilt church edifice,
that had been - when the kirk was on its former site - occupied by the prow of a vessel
being constructed in the adjacent shipyard. The rebuilt church itself, was - in its
Esplanade site - rotated about considerably clockwise to its former orientation, as can
be seen from comparing the above photographs of ‘after’ with ‘before’ transfer (and
Appendix 2 : Conjectural map of Old West Kirk in both past and present locations.)
An interesting comparison is the view past the laird’s stairway. Besides the change in
background, it is of note that the plaque of the Schaw lairds (above the crypt door) was,
50
between the old site and the new, changed from a full coat of arms to merely the shield
showing the ‘covered cups. Maybe the original tablet was damaged during the transfer.
The carvings were the masons’ individual marks, vital to prove each man’s claim in a
‘piecework’ system of payment. Having served that purpose, however, the marks were
then, by the orientation of the stones, deliberately hidden as the display of such carvings
would, at the time of building, be deemed contrary to Presbyterian-Calvinism’s aversion
to personal promotion and frivolous decoration where any glory must only go to God.
During the re-building, apparently, it had been swithered whether to reverse the stones
such that the marks would become visible. However, in fulfilling an injunction for the
kirk to be rebuilt as much “as before”, the stones concerned were put back in the same
orientation as when removed. Alas, nevertheless, that no photographs were taken when
the marks were thus exposed, so that posterity might have shared in the ‘wonder’.
The Peat generations exemplify the stalwart families, whose zest and dedication to
the Old West Kirk, in fulfilling its Christian mission and community involvement,
would have made its founder, Johnne Schaw, to rejoice.
Removal of kirk, kirkyard plus former manse, enabled a space which, when added to
the other territorial acquisitions obtained by H&W in the centre of Greenock, formed a
gargantuan site that may be appreciated in ‘before’ and ‘after’ comparison per, namely:
The ‘Plan of Greenock to Accompany (postal) Directory’ 1915-16, and that of 1930-31.
(Max. length within yard, from shoreline inland, was at Old West Kirk end, being 274 metres:
S.S. Titanic was 269 metres long and H&W desired to build here ships of at least that length.)
Just as the congregation of the Old West Kirk and the elders of Greenock Presbytery
had watched to see if H&W would fulfil its promises regarding the transfer of the kirk -
and had been agreeably satisfied in this respect - now the populace and authorities of
Greenock waited to see if the company would equally fulfil its promises of employment
and prosperity with regard to the new shipbuilding yard being constructed in the town.
(A photo appears at the foot of page 27 of this narrative.) taken at the present-day, from
the Greenock Ocean Terminal pontoon, offers a view illustrating the very considerable
extent of foreshore which Harland & Wolff’s shipyard occupied in the 1920s, stretching
between the West Burn outlet into the River Clyde and the Custom House,
53
Eighth Phase : Old West Kirk: 1928 - 2011: renaissance until amalgamation
By 1928 - Sunday, February, 19th, the transplanted kirk re-opened for worship in its
(present) Esplanade location. Intimation of the transfer is included in the plaque
positioned on the kirk’s southeast facing exterior gable wall. The images below, show:
(Left) southeast gable and tower; (right) the back of the kirk with the laird’s stairway;(below)
the Pirrie Hall, also the plaque which is situated halfway up the gable wall shown to the left.
By 1929, in stark contrast to the kirk, flourishing in its new location, on its old location
Harland & Wolff ceased trading in its Greenock shipyard. Since taking over therein,
only a couple of ships had been constructed in the yard since becoming operational
about 1926 and never a keel was laid in that part of it which had formed the original site
of the kirk and its burial ground. Local doom-mongers of the day proclaimed that, as
they had prophesised, defilement of consecrated ground had incurred divine retribution.
However, 1929 was the year wherein began the ‘Great Depression’, a calamity that
totally devastated economy, the commerce and employment throughout the industrial
world. And it does seem a trifle presumptuous to surmise that the Almighty would
penalise the entire planet for such a sacrilegious transgression, localised to Greenock!
{In 1937 the political exigency in Ireland which had prompted H&W’s impetus to
decamp its operation into Great Britain had, some time before this, abated, thereby
negating need for this contingency. Consequently, the company had duly divested itself
of the Greenock site, selling the land that it had purchased and relinquishing leases for
the rest. The strip of real-estate, which had contained the shipyard, is today occupied
by, respectively, east to west, the ‘West College Scotland’ Waterfront Campus, the
waterfront leisure centre, the cruise liner reception centre, the waterfront cinema, the
bingo hall, and the eastern portion of Greenock Ocean Terminal, the latter also
extending in a narrow strip along the shoreline, behind the bingo hall and cinema.}
To return now to the kirk in its new environment at the corner of the Esplanade.
Photograph by courtesy of Peel Ports Group, Ltd. Photographed by Guthrie Aerial Photography, Helensburgh
55
Within the kirk, not only did each of the heritor families - i.e. S(c)haw and Crawfurd -
possess the perk of areas allocated for attending worship within the building when alive,
they also each had a place of interment allocated for depositing their dead within the
structure. This had been the case with the structure in its former location and similar
re-allocation was thereby demarcated with regard to the kirk in its new location.
That of the Crawfurd family seems - nowadays on the present site - to be underground
adjacent to the Crawfurd Aisle… Stone slabs on the ground mark the entrance to the
Crawfurd crypt just outside the exterior wall of the kirk (a little left of the present main
entrance) with the coat of arms of the family placed above, on the wall itself.
Presumably, beneath the slabs, a stairway leads to a subterranean chamber - the crypt.
Although Thomas Crawfurd was the 1st laird of Cartsburn, the 6th one “designed herself
‘Mrs. Christian Crawfurd of Crawfurdsburn.” So George Williamson states on page 74
of his book, ‘Old Cartsburn’ (1894). “She married Mr. Thomas Macknight of Rotho in
September, 1779.” “Her husband declined to take, at least did not take the name
Crawfurd. It was assumed by her only son and successor, who was, as an
instrumentary, witness to charters granted by her at Ratho, and designated ‘William
Macknight Crawfurd of Ratho.” (I.e. Ratho Byres in Midlothian.) The story continues
on page 78: “Mrs. Christian Crawfurd died on 12th April, 1818, and was succeeded by
her only son, William then in his 34th year. He had dropped the name Macknight and
designated himself in his Charters simply as ‘William Crawfurd of Cartsburn’”.
Nevertheless, thereafter, the family seems to have reverted to ‘Macknight Crawfurd’.
It is not recorded when the now sealed crypt was last used by the family, nor whether
there is any means to contact the descendants. Memorial plaques to the family are
wall-mounted within the kirk. On one, the last intimation of a family death is in 1879.
The forenoted coat of arms, marking the entrance to the crypt, contains both Crawford
and Macknight elements. Representing the original Crawford family, a device of
crossed swords is shown in a saltire motif (presumably alluding to a former military
prowess in that branch). This appears in the shield whilst the crest above it is of an old
fashioned pan-balance (i.e. for weighing commodities) maybe alluding to the family’s
descent from Thomas as a merchant. The Latin motto: “Quad tibi hoc alteri” translates
idiomatically as ‘Do unto others as you would have them do unto you’. Another motto
incorporated in the armorial bearing but pertaining to the Macknight side of the family,
and also in Latin: “Nil durum volenti” means ‘Nothing is difficult for the willing’.
56
{Heraldic mottos - typically, clichés purporting a worthiness that is not necessarily the
truth and, moreover, deliberately arrayed in a non-vernacular tongue - are a pretention
of aristocratic snobbery which was, and still is, widely resorted to in granting heraldry.
Johnne Schaw’s ‘I mean well’ motto was at least in the vernacular and, thus, would be
understood by all of his tenants, able to judge for themselves if he lived up to its claim!}
This crypt is a smallish chamber with (per photo) a barrel-vaulted brick roof -so,
probably not the original, as on the old site, it would have been made of stone. The
chamber is sunken slightly below ground level and is empty of any sarcophaguses or
other burial ‘furniture’. Actually, it now fulfils the prosaic function of a storeroom for
the gardening tools, etc., which keep the surrounding lawn and flowerbeds in trim! It is
supposed that the “Schaw Aisle”… “was built over the grave in which Johnne Schaw
was buried only three years after the church was opened.” So Ninian Hill opines in
‘The Story of the Old West Kirk’, on page 9. Perhaps Johnne’s descendants were laid
to rest herein too, but transferred to lie beside those of the Stewart family in Inverkip
after the focus of the family transferred there, and they became the ‘Shaw Stewarts’.
The Schaw vault does not seem to have been used ever, by the family (or by anyone
else, for that matter) as a tomb, after the 1864 renovation.
As previously noted, It was not only the heritors’ families who had to be considered
during the transfer to the Esplanade site. There were also the committals in the old kirk
graveyard, whose descendants had opted for their forebears to be re-interred in the
Kirk’s new site. And there the revered bodies lie, undisturbed since, beneath the
ground in front of the grave-slabs which grace the length of the western wall or below
its recumbent slabs.
Due to this area being, in effect, a cemetery, the kirk was affirmed in an ‘A-listed
building’ category; that is, of national importance, worthy of protection. As also
previously noted, proof of this is given in Appendix 1 : Remains exhumed from old
kirkyard & re-interred in Seafield site. In the appendix too is Scottish Parliamentary
documentation defining the legal protection of internments.)
The undernoted montage of the gravestones in the kirkyard at the Esplanade site, both
along the western wall or recumbent in the ground beside the Pirrie Hall, owes much to
the contribution of Lynnette Robertson.
57
Yet another feature of the transfer to the Esplanade was the new tower - shown below.
J. S. Burt, in ‘The Old West Kirk’, on page 17 re-affirms that “Furnishings and many
features which the congregation had learned to know so well, would also be taken” to
the Esplanade site On page 45 Bolton describes how the “handsome pulpit , octagonal
in shape, is carved with the heads of the Apostles, Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, and also
depicts four mystical ‘beasts’ from Revelations (Chapter 4) , the Lion, the Eagle, the
Winged-calf, the Beast with a man’s face, the centre panel shows the Lamb of God.
Although the wall décor within the church was, perforce, a re-creation, the plethora of
original wood internals, restored into the counterpart locations that they had occupied
previously, enabled to kirk interior to appear little different than it had previously. In
fact, that rich woodwork set the kirk all aglow, as the following pages will amply attest.
58
View looking towards the ‘Schaw Aisle’ with, to the right, the pulpit and baptismal font
View towards the Sailors’ Loft/Gallery/Balcony, with doorway to its stairway to left
Original main entrance to the church was in middle of the gable where the radiator now is.
59
View towards Sailors’ Loft/Gallery/Balcony and pulpit from the main seating area pews
View towards the Farmers’ Loft/Gallery from the front row of the Sailors’ Loft/Gallery
Pulpit is to left below, ‘Cartsburn Aisle/Gallery’ left and the ‘Schaw Aisle’ to right
60
Jess S. Bolton, in ‘The Old West Kirk 1591-1991’, on page 31, sums up the
translocation. “Built on the… shore in 1591 by Johnne Schaw, it was now… re-built a
short distance away on another shore, with almost the same view across the River Clyde
to the Argyleshire hills and ‘bens’. That it should be within sight of passing ships was
fitting, for it had long been known as the ‘Sailors’ Kirk’.” The wee kirk thrived anew!
It is apposite to pause here to consider how convoluted fissures and fusions relating to
Greenock’s Presbyterian Gaelic language churches, during the post-1843-‘Disruption’
period intertwined with the Old and New West Kirks, this attempted by interpolating
among, respectively, ‘The Old West Kirk’, by Jess S. Bolton; ‘The Old Kirk’, by the
Rev. J. Marshall Scoular; and ‘The History of Greenock’, by Robert Murray Smith.
To revert now to the Gaelic Chapel and the mid-19th century. A petition concerning it
then “said that there were upwards of 10,000 highlanders in Greenock and district,
many of whom were unable to worship in English”. With the General Assembly of the
Church of Scotland’s permission, “the Gaelic Chapel became a Parish Church on the
11th July 1855.” “The Church was to have no territorial area assigned to it, and would
be known for all time as the Gaelic Parish and Parish of Greenock.” (Scoular, p 16).
In 1966 negotiations “resulted in the union of the Gaelic Parish Church and the [new]
West Kirk whereby the buildings in West Stewart Street were closed [demolished long
ago with the location now a supermarket site] and the buildings of the [new] West Kirk
became the buildings of the united congregation to be known as The Old Kirk,
Greenock”. (Scoular, pp. 17 & 19). This building is the present Westburn Church.
So, just as the Gaelic Parish Church’s absorption into the (New) West Kirk in 1966,
similarly St. Columba’s Gaelic Church would be united with the Old West Kirk, this on
January 10th, 1979. Although no longer a church, the St. Columba’s Church building is
nowadays a restaurant which operates under a Gaelic name: ‘Café Mòr’ (i.e., big café).
As has been noted previously (and as indicated by Jess S. Bolton, in ‘The Old West
Kirk’, on page vi, since 1872, the official name of the Old West Kirk had been the
‘North Parish’ Church, - which its parishioners had chosen to completely ignore in
preference to using the former name! And doubtless, they would be overjoyed insofar
that the name, the ‘Old West Kirk’, was to be officially resurrected in 1979 for the
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To summarise the foregoing: the Gaelic Parish Church (situated in West Stewart Street)
merged into what is nowadays Westburn Church, and St. Columba’s Gaelic Church
merged into the Old West Kirk. With such mergers resulting in churches renaming
and/or relocating, tracing a particular congregation after its church has disappeared (this
becoming ever more common onwards from the mid-20th century) is often baffling!
See pullout at the back of the book for a sequence/timeline of derivative churches.
62
The Old West Kirk complex played an active part during World War 2 - 1939-45. J. S.
Burt, in ‘The Old West Kirk’, on page 25 notes; “The Shaw-Stewart (sic) vault became
an air-raid shelter for the congregation [a cramped space for just twenty, even if all
standing!] and the Pirrie Hall became an emergency centre. Evening Services had to be
suspended owing to lack of a blackout.” (of lights that might guide in enemy bombers.)
The previously noted plaque upon the outside wall of the kirk, added post-1928, tells of
how the building was built by Johnne Schaw of Grenok. On the interior walls of the
kirk there are plaques to various members of the second heritor family - the Crawfurds.
However, curiously there is not, nor ever has been, within of the kirk itself, any
memorial to commemorate its Schaw founder or, indeed, any of his heritor descendants.
Bolton notes, on page 44, that the Pirrie Hall had required to grow “with the times and
was enlarged with two extensions. The first was in 1937 when a wish was expressed
for an extra meeting place. The men of the church got together to turn this dream into
a reality.” “They formed a working group, one of whom was Mr Robert Peat… thus
carrying on a family tradition of working for the church: it will be remembered that his
father, Mr William Peat, a stone mason, had helped to dismantle and rebuild the Old
West from 1925 to 1928”. “The new extension, opened in 1965, was named the ‘John
Morrison Youth Hall in honour of the minister…” “Included in a ‘time capsule’ sealed
into the foundation, was “a copy of the ‘Greenock Telegraph’ where Mr Peat’s
daughter, Elizabeth [aged just 7 then] had written her name in the ‘Stop-Press’ column.”
The new edifice - unlike the Pirrie Hall, nowadays a Grade ‘C’ Listed building - has no
architectural pretension and is largely obscured behind high walls, plus the Pirrie Hall,
on site. However, it remains functional - and was always busy, as was the kirk itself,
despite the national downturn in church membership as the 20th century progressed.
In the early years of the millennium, Alec Galloway, a stained glass artist of local and
national standing, was entrusted to undertake necessary maintenance of the precious
kirk windows, removing some to his workshop, to totally deconstruct as a prerequisite
to replacing any crumbling ‘leading’ and damaged glass. In effecting this expertise, he
regaled of having encountered, on some glass pieces, especially window edges which
(normally embedded in the lead slotting and thus never on public view) had derogatory
comments etched thereon by perhaps disgruntled apprentices against their employers!
He also came across trinkets and even coins, embedded in the leads, all of which he
replaced in situ when re-assembling the windows. With the same attitude as William
Peat when dismantling the masonry in 1925 for transfer to the Esplanade, Mr. Galloway
treated these ‘lucky tokens’ left by his counterpart predecessors, as an integral part of
the windows’ history, and therefore to be retained in perpetuity, “where they belonged”.
All seemed well concerning the kirk’s future, but a wind of change had been blowing.
Nationally, congregational expansion had begun to reverse from the mid-20th century
and this accelerating. As the result of such ecclesiastical contractions, locally, there
was an amalgamation in 2011 which involved the Old West Kirk. Although the wee
kirk still possessed a viable congregation within itself, such merging was purposed to
create, an ongoing viable unit overall for the area, this to be designated: the ‘Lyle Kirk’,
comprising of two other church complexes in addition to the Old West Kirk. A vote to
merge was ratified by a composite vote of the three congregations. Subsequently, by
another such vote, the Old West Kirk was declared surplus to requirements for worship.
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Ninth Phase : Old West Kirk : 2011 - 2022: re-incarnation in some new role?
Would this be the eventide of community use, or finding a new lease of life for the kirk?
Since 2011 it had been devoid of religious or other purpose, so effectively ‘mothballed’.
Two of the Old West Kirk ex-congregational members, Mrs Lynnette Robertson and
Mrs Elizabeth Terris (née Peat, granddaughter of William Peat, and daughter of Robert
Peat, prime-mover of the above-noted new hall work-party) were permitted to exercise
a reporting brief on behalf of the Lyle Kirk, to ensure that the kirk and its associated
buildings were kept in a good state of repair and its grounds maintained immaculately.
In 2016 representatives of the Lyle Kirk Session entered into discussions with ‘Historic
Churches Scotland’ (HCS); a charity dedicated to saving similar churches redundant in
a religious capacity, through working with local communities to redeploy the edifices to
a new but appropriate life through expert conservation and creative regeneration. HCS
worked long and assiduously to identify, in prospect, a raft of grants plus funding
sources through future use of the premises by local community-based organisations, to
create a financial ‘package’ to potentially enable the envisaged complex to exist viably.
Regrettably, all was put on hold due to the 2020 pandemic Covid-19 with an enforced
‘lockdown’ of activity in the United Kingdom except for that legally deemed necessary.
Of course, because of the kirk being a Grade ‘A’ listed building and with a host of
interments within its precincts, any buyer would be extremely restricted in significantly
‘developing’ the church building or its environs. Thus, an optimal best option, for both
Lyle Kirk and Inverclyde, might be a local community-orientated group or partnership.
Anyhow, to evaluate: apart from commercial exploitation of this premier location, what,
alternatively, had the Old West Kirk got to offer to attract an appropriate future use?
Undoubtedly, it was/is a both time capsule and mirror of many episodes in the story and
traditions of the area that would grow into today’s town of Greenock. In its lifespan of
centuries, it had, once before, been discarded but rescued as precious by its community.
64
It has been a rock through times of tribulation and triumph, surviving despite religious
and civil controversy. It epitomises innovation, inspiration and ingenuity. As an
initial kirk in the Reformation era, it is pivotal to its Christian denomination but is also,
nowadays, viewed with affection by people of all local religions - and none - such that
it has the opportunity to become an ecumenical symbol of faith and hope for everyone.
Of course, in the kirk’s long lifespan there have been many changes - mostly additions -
to the fabric - but these in a continuum stretching right back to its 1591 inauguration.
Having had several names during its existence, a timeline of these is under-noted, viz.:-
1591 ‘Parish Kirk of Greenock’ specified by King James VI of Scots in royal charter
1594 Kirk of Greenock Parish, due to parish created by Act of Scottish Parliament
1761 Old Parish Kirk or West Kirk (due to inauguration of New Parish/ Mid Kirk)
1841 Interregnum when abandoned for worship as ‘obsolescent and too small’
1864 Old West Kirk after re-opening; ‘Old’ to differentiate it from ‘New’ West Kirk
1925 Interruption of services for 3 years due to transfer of site to the Esplanade
1872 North Parish Church; but congregation continued to call it the Old West Kirk
1979 Old West Kirk; resumed as official name after merging with St. Columba’s Kirk
2011 Discontinuance from public worship after amalgamation into ‘Lyle Kirk’
(Often, in the past, it was nicknamed colloquially as the ‘Sailors’ Kirk’)
“A rose by any other name would smell as sweet” wrote, ca. 1591, William Shakespeare
who - had he travelled north from his native England thenabouts - could have seen the
planting of this particular ‘flower’, which hasn’t withered, but indeed blooms yet!
Even the breaks in provision of worship within the kirk, occurring during, respectively,
1841-1864 and 1925-1928, proved to be, in its resumption, the impetus for introduction
of new ideas. Thus kirk has also often, been in the forefront of societal improvement.
Set nowadays in the pleasant Esplanade corner of Greenock’s superb ‘West End’, the
wee kirk has a proven record as an esteemed destination for parties of tourists brought
by the Inverclyde Tourist Group and other organisations, or who come in an individual
capacity, all wishing to experience its various attractions. Such visitors are entranced:
to learn of the kirk’s history and lore - this in so many ways, that of Greenock itself;
to hear of and enjoy the anecdotes about the people and historical events, national
and local, associated with the building and its congregation over the many centuries;
to marvel at its elegant architecture, and unique collection of stained-glass windows;
to scrutinise the old gravestones which tell of past trades and families of the district;
to meditate in spirit within the quiet and peacefulness of the kirk’s tranquil interior.
Despite these obvious attributes, the ancient building, including its present ambient site,
nowadays faces a challenging crossroads, whereat a heritage-touristic prospect would
appear to be an advantageous way forward in view of the fact that tourism is a present
and increasingly important mainstay of how ‘Inverclyde’ can earn its future livelihood.
It is accepted that future use of the building must not be inimical to religious decorum,
although a wish to retain ‘Old West Kirk’ in its ongoing designation would be likely.
65
A tourist destination may have among its attractions, shops and places of entertainment,
each of which must be financially viable to justify continuance. And that is how an
accountant would approach the subject. If, during a period of touristic downturn, such
individual businesses disappear, then probably similar will re-established during any
ensuing upturn. By contrast, a historic building, as a potential touristic asset to attract
visitors, is different insofar that, once eradicated, it cannot be retrieved: an irreplaceable
loss to future tourism. Too often in the past, Inverclyde has carelessly disposed of such
an asset, this because an accountant’s philosophy only has been applied in the matter.
A historical tourist attraction may not always be able to generate enough direct income
to sustain itself. However, its touristic value must be judged on the income that it also
generates indirectly for the area through visitors who, coming to see it, may additionally
spend money on accommodation, eating, transport, etc., within the locality. That goes
beyond the narrow view of an accountant to embrace the wider vision of an economist.
Of course, no community can afford to sustain buildings at public expense only because
they are historic. Thus, some other means must be found to generate income to upkeep
them. In the case of the Old West Kirk, in addition to the church itself (which ought to
be conserved in as intrinsic a condition as possible) there are the associated Pirrie and
Morrison Halls which could be used for ancillary finance-raising purposes. Moreover,
to render them more capable of doing so, ‘lottery’ funding and grants could be sought.
Hopefully, a lead will be taken by the various heritage, cultural and tourist organisations
in the district, co-operating to present a business plan for the employment of the Old
West Kirk which will encompass and enhance the local community’s involvement in it.
Success would, undoubtedly, benefit Inverclyde’s touristic and, hence, financial future.
Failure would, undoubtedly, be a heritage and social loss to Inverclyde’s eternal shame.
The ‘Old West Kirk’ - the proud and serene ‘sentinel’ to Greenock’s scenic Esplanade
The foregoing was written before the announcement of a sale and its outcome (this dealt with in the next
section) and the wording has been left to reflect the ethos prevailing at the time of it being formulated.
66
Tenth Phase: what transpired due to the sale of the Old West Kirk in 2022
Firstly, although several groups, indeed, proved interested in acquiring the site for some
purpose, diversity in the such proposed usages inhibited co-operating toward the goal of
compositely bidding for it. Secondly, no group was initially prepared to take the lead
in formulating a composite business plan to support a bid, plus allocating facilities in
the future use of the site in event that the bid proved successful. Thirdly, no group had
unilateral access to the purchase price and potential running costs, and none the wish to
carry the responsibility of co-ordinating the others in procuring such monies. Due to
the foregoing obstacles, it took time and effort to coax such disparity into coalescence.
However, for just such a community buyout, a ‘SCIO’ (Scottish Charitable Incorporated
Organisation) had been registered in 2017 as ‘the ‘Old West Kirk Trust’. It had several
‘trustees’ although was effectively latent, with no infrastructure, affiliated groups nor
business plan. However, with suitable documentation now provided by members from
the dozen local organisations supporting the ‘community buyout’, a bid was able to be
submitted on the due date, incorporating these various organisations, acting under the
auspice of this SCIO. Simultaneously initiated, had been social media coverage
including a ‘crowd-funding’ mechanism, gathering monetary pledges towards the effort,
Highlighting the
special quality of
the kirk’s stained
glass windows,
the local artistic
body, RIG Arts,
projected on the
kirk’s southeast
gable, a selection
interspersed with
suitable slogans.
A written plea,
to the Church of
Photograph reproduced by courtesy of RIG Arts - @TRANCND, photographed by Jason Orr Scotland Legal
67
Department, was presented by the Secretary of ‘The Scottish Stained Glass Trust’, Mrs
Alison Robertson, for this unique collection of windows to be retained in situ. In
tandem, the Secretary of the ‘Historical Churches Scotland’, Mrs Victoria Collison-
Owen, entered a submission also urging that kirk’s future remain in community hands.
The importance of the kirk, to the future wellbeing of Inverclyde through tourism, was
emphasised by, respectively the area’s Member of the UK Parliament, Mr. Ronnie
Cowan, and the Member of the Scottish Parliament, Mr. Stuart McMillan, in letters, in
support of a community buyout, sent to the Church of Scotland’s Legal Department.
The foregoing re-assurances, given to the Church of Scotland by Mr. Medinelli, plus his
likewise community-spirited sentiments, expressed in the ‘Greenock Telegraph’ article
of above date (and reproduced in full in Appendix 4), augurs extremely favourably for
evolution, in due course, of a significant ongoing role for the Old West Kirk within a
coalition of commerce, community involvement and heritage tourism which, hopefully,
will contribute greatly to the future social wellbeing and financial prosperity of the
people and businesses alike, not only of Greenock but of Inverclyde as a whole.
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Appendix 1 : Remains exhumed from old kirkyard & re-interred in Seafield site
(See pages 49 & 56 for relevance)
The ‘Greenock Telegraph’ of the 6th of August 1919 carried the intimation, regarding
the above-noted, that: “The more important memorial stones will all have a place in
the grounds [Seafield]where the dust of the long departed dead will be reverently laid.”
Of course, it would only be due to the human remains of these forebears being of little
bulk (parcels of dust, indeed) that they all could be accommodated in such a small area!
Two sets of documents attest to this transfer of gravestones and related mortal remains.
The first, dated 12th January, 1927, headed ‘List of Stones and Remains in Old West
Kirkyard to be Removed to Seafield’, is a Harland & Wolff compilation, composed of
five (nowadays) very tattered pages, arraying the lairs (and persons within them) to be
transferred between the sites. The columns within the format cover, respectively: the
name of the person wishing the transfer: location of gravestone in the old cemetery:
type and size and any other details of each stone that would facilitate identifying it.
Record of those whose Remains were Removed from the Old West Kirkyard,
Greenock, and Reinterred at Other Burying Grounds 1928. It is drawn from the
Register & Plan prepared by Greenock Corporation (forerunner to today’s Council).
It details the mortal remains and the gravestones of those exhumed from the Old West
Kirk graveyard, with disbursement to, respectively, Greenock Municipal Cemetery,
opened in 1846; Inverkip [Street] Burying Ground, opened around 1786; and the
Seafield site for the Old West Kirk. The first page of the latter is reproduced below.
A national
figure; one of a
number of local
‘notables’
reburied herein
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In all, there, it would be no exaggeration to assess that no less than half a thousand
mortal remains were thus removed to the Seafield precinct of the Old West Kirk. In
fact, probably more than that as there would be many remains, buried in the original
lairs, in the early centuries before the advent of engraved inscriptions on gravestones.
As above-noted, most were probably reduced to a mere handful of mortal dust, but all
deserve to be still revered in their new resting place, this making the Seafield precinct
hallowed ground. In fact, it is recognised by Inverclyde Council as a local burial site.
Below is an extract from page 2 of the 1928 list showing some specialist applications.
All of the foregoing documentation is lodged, nowadays - and open for public access -
within Inverclyde Council’s archival collections at the ‘Watt Institution’, situated at the
corner of Union and Kelly Streets, Greenock.
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Letter received upon enquiry as to the legal position and the Scottish Parliamentary
protection to be applied to those interred around the Old West Kirk
within its present Seafield/Esplanade site
5 September 2022
Thanks for your enquiry. You noted an advert from the Church of Scotland for the sale of a
church and surrounding land in Greenock. The constituent is concerned that the advert
makes no explicit mention of the bodies which may be buried in the ground surrounding
the church. He has documentation that suggests up to 500 bodies may be buried there.
You asked for information on what the legal requirements might be for any buyer
purchasing land on which bodies may be buried.
The advert
The advert does make clear that the main part of the site is category A listed. This covers
the church building, the memorials (gravestones), boundary walls and fencing. It may
include much of the garden ground.
In addition, the site currently falls within “class 10” in terms of planning restrictions on land
use. This covers buildings used for public worship (or for the social or recreational
activities of religious bodies). It also covers use as:
a law court.
There are references in the advert to the possibility that bodies may have been re-interred
in the church grounds as well as in a vault when the building was moved from its original
site in the 1920s.
Planning constraints
Listed buildings consent
Because the site is listed, listed buildings consent from the local planning authority would
be needed to make any changes which affected the character of the church. This would
include alternations to the exterior or interior of the building – and is likely to include
anything which would affect the memorials within the site.
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Inverclyde Council’s policy on listed buildings can be found in its Local Development Plan
2019 pages 36 to 37.
Planning permission
The site can currently be used as a place of worship or for the other – broadly public –
purposes also covered under class 10 land use. A change of use (for example, to
residential housing) would require planning permission.
It would also be possible for the planning authority to attach conditions to any approvals –
for example, that certain works are supervised by an archaeological expert.
Broadly, the planning process can be expected to thoroughly consider any risks to cultural
heritage (including gravestones) from a proposal, as well as to put requirements in place to
minimise the risk of disturbing graves.
Disinterment
The common law is the traditional law as developed by judges through decisions in
individual cases. The common law protects a grave from disturbance until at least the
process of disintegration of a body is complete.
Broadly, anyone who wants to disinter a body needs to apply to the courts for permission.
That permission is not generally granted unless there is consent from the family members
of those affected or there are strong reasons for doing so.
There are specific exceptions to this requirement in legislation for some public bodies
(including government ministers, planning authorities or “statutory undertakings” such as
Scottish Water). They can disinter bodies without additional authority in relation to certain
types of development.
Burial authorities (bodies with responsibility for the management of public burial grounds)
can also disinter bodies where necessary or expedient in terms of their management
functions.
Where someone accidentally disinters a body, there is probably a requirement to report the
matter to the police for further investigation. There is also a requirement to treat the
remains with dignity and respect. Re-interment should be a consideration in relation to this.
Guidance from Historic Scotland (2006) in relation to how archaeologists should treat
human remains describes some of the considerations.
Best wishes
Abigail Bremner
Senior Researcher
Justice and Social Affairs Research Unit
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Appendix 2 : Conjectural map of Old West Kirk in both past and present locations
(See page 49 for relevance)
Note: No such drawing as that referred above and depicted below actually exits. What
is illustrated is a contrived composite in which an actual map of pre-1925 has had,
superimposed upon it, the post-1928 immediate area around the Seafield end of the
Esplanade, this simply to highlight the relative ‘before’ and ‘after’ locations of the kirk
within Greenock. The direct distance between the sites is 0.54 miles / 0.87 kilometres.
Seafield House Pirrie Hall Location of Laird’s stairway on Schaw Aisle (transept)
A magnetic compass reading of the kirk in its present location finds the Crawfurd
transept gable (i.e. facing the Clyde and containing the main door) on a Northeast
reading, such precision probably deliberate, facilitating checking that all external walls
were at proper right angles to one another by recourse to main axis compass bearings.
By using the compass reading of the long established West Blackhall Street, it was
possible to deduce that the kirk, in its former location, was built on a precise North-
South axis. Its Crawfurd gable would then face due West. During relocation, it has
therefore been rotated clockwise by 1½ right-angles (i.e. 135 degrees). Its original
door was on the nave’s south facing gable. This gable nowadays faces northwest.
Roman Catholic churches were almost invariably built - for doctrinal reasons - facing
east, i.e. an East-West axis - . Why Johnne Schaw chose to build his diametrically
opposed may only be conjectured. Perhaps to emphasise the difference with the old
religion. Actually, Presbyterian churches have never been constrained to adhere to any
specific orientation.
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Northeast facing transept Southeast facing gable end Southwest facing transept
(Reproduction of the drawings on this page or subsequent ones is not to any scale, or even to the same scale)
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Northeast facing transept Southeast facing gable end Southwest facing transept
(Left protruding) Crawfurd Aisle (Below) The Farmers’ LoftGallery (Right protruding) Schaw Aisle
External view of
northeast facing
gable with front
entrance into the
kirk at its centre
External view of
southwest facing
gable with the
Schaw Laird’s
stairway leading
into the Schaw
Aisle
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External view of
northwest facing
gable which once
contained the main
entrance to the
kirk and now has
upon it the wall-
mounted plaque
intimating the
original date of
building and that
of transfer to the
Seafield site
79
Interior section
athwart kirk,
viewed from
northwest
toward Sailors’
Loft/Gallery
80
Appendix 4 : ‘Greenock Telegraph’ article stating new owner of Old West Kirk
(See page 67 for relevance)
‘The Story of the Old West Kirk of Greenock 1591’ (1911, 2nd Edition) Ninian Hill
‘The Scots Peerage’, Volume 3 (1906) edit. Sir James Balfour Paul
‘The Old West Kirk, 1591-1991’ (1991) Jess S. Bolton
‘The Old West Kirk, 1591-1958’, A History (1958) compiled by James S. Burt
‘The Old Kirk, Greenock - A History 1591-1791-1970’ (1970) Rev. J. Marshall Scoular
‘The History of the Sufferings of the Church of Scotland’, Vol. 4 (1832) Robert Wodrow
‘The History of Greenock’ (1921) Robert Murray Smith
‘The Cutty Stool’(1995) Murdoch Lothian
‘Old Greenock’ (1888, 2nd Series) George Williamson
‘Old Cartsburn’ (1894) George Williamson
‘History of the Town of Greenock’ (1829) Daniel Weir
‘Finding Forgotten Finnart’ (2021) Andrew Pearson
‘Fighting for Liberty’ (2020) Stephen M. Carter
‘A Selection of the Papers from the Earl of Marchmont’ Volume 3 (1831)
‘A History of Clan Campbell’, Volume 3 (2004) Alastair Campbell of Airds
‘Inverkip Parish - A Brief History’ Allan A. McArthur
‘The Holy Bible’ (1611): known as the ‘King James Version’ compiled by 47 theologians
The Poetry of Robert Burns in one of its many reproductions
The play ‘Romeo and Juliet’ 1591/6 by William Shakespeare for quote “A rose by any other name”
The ‘Telegraph’, Greenock newspaper, of 2nd of December, 2022, article on page 5
In recent times, the unique and renowned collection of stained-glass windows in the Old
West Kirk has been maintained by Alec Galbraith, noted local and nationally acclaimed
expert as an artist and master craftsman in his field.
Postscript
This assessment has not sought to reproduce all of the information encompassed by the
numerous and various historical sources which describe the fabric of the kirk, plus the
episodes and personages of local and national importance , interweaving with it over the
centuries. Instead, the purpose has been to extract and collate sufficient salients to
afford a continuity of the Old West Kirk’s development and its place in history, plus to
analyse, in greater detail than has been done previously, certain aspects (e.g. the royal
charter of King James VI to Johnne Schaw in inauguration of the kirk: also the epoch
encompassing the lead-up to, duration and aftermath of the ‘Disruption’) to deduce their
profound significance in, respectively, motivations, strategies and consequences, etc.
This compilation is, respectfully, intended as both a compliment and complement to the
above-noted books etc. on the subject, which contain a cornucopia of lore to be gleaned.
Very grateful acknowledgement is hereby made to these authors whose erudition has
been drawn upon and quoted herein - even when it has been, occasionally, contested!
This book - begun as an ‘assessment’ of the kirk’s religious and social relevance to its
local community historically - became caught up in the Church of Scotland’s selling off
of its site. It became, thereafter, a contemporaneous unfolding record of a community
campaign centring around an ‘assessment’ of how the kirk’s heritage might transmute
to a potential future in ‘heritage-tourism’ and ‘community’, benefitting Inverclyde.
Sadly, during this same period, it has been decided, by the authorities of the Church of
Scotland, that, due its membership, throughout Scotland, having shrunk so drastically in
recent times, a much wider rationalising, hence downsizing of church buildings both
locally and nationally would be undertaken, inevitably causing distress to parishioners
through nostalgia. Consequently, the Lyle Kirk’s splendid Finnart St. Paul’s Church -
due to extensive repairs now being required - is, alas, among those “pending disposal,
with a similar fate being proposed for Westburn Church because of its steeple being
considered unsafe and the cost of rectification being so very considerable. In the latter
case, it should be borne in mind that the ‘Tam o lang’ bell properly belongs with the
Old West Kirk from whence it came, as likewise the set of 1708 Communion chalices.
The Old West Kirk, fortunately, is hopefully saved, in good hands, for a new purpose.
The chart illustrates the complex labyrinth, in both proliferation and uniting, of
Presbyterian denominational churches in Greenock, covering the period from
the 1591 inauguration of Johnne Schaw’s kirk towards its 400th anniversary.
The chart was designed to commemorate that event on behalf of the then called
St. Luke’s Church, Nelson Street, (nowadays designated as Westburn Church).
As Jess S. Bolton penned, on page 31 of ‘The Old West Kirk’: “built on the west shore in 1591 by
Johnne Schaw, it was now to be re-built a short distance away on another shore, with almost the
same view across the River Clyde to the Argyllshire hills and ‘bens’. That it should be in sight of
passing ships was fitting, for it had long been known as the ‘Sailors Kirk.’” Continuity indeed!